Wednesday, February 8, 2023

If not Joe, who?

 Recently, there have been a lot of pieces urging Joe Biden not to run for reelection in 2024. I don’t think that anyone other than Donald Trump and his most devout supporters want a rematch of the 2020 Trump versus Biden race. Most Americans shudder at the mere thought of a replay of the year that most want to forget.

By Elvert Barnes - https://www.flickr.com/photos/perspective/52485660899/, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=125157939

Most people don’t want either of the two, even on a separate basis. A new Washington Post-ABC News poll found that 58 percent of Democrats and Democrat-leaners want someone other than the incumbent to run in 2024. Only 31 percent want Mr. Biden renominated. On the Republican side, it isn’t much different. Forty-nine percent don’t want Donald Trump to run again compared to 41 percent who do.

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The Republicans do have an advantage in having a deeper bench. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis is the strongest challenger, but there are other options as well. Nikki Haley, ambassador to the United Nations under Donald Trump and a former governor of South Carolina, has already thrown her hat into the ring, but there are a number of other strong possibilities, many of whom ran against Donald Trump in the 2016 primary. Mike Pence may run and Senators Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio are possible candidates as well. Governors like Larry Hogan, Chris Sununu, and Brian Kemp may also test the waters.

On the Democratic side, there are far fewer options. “Saturday Night Live” hit close to home last year when the show ran a faux horror movie trailer in which friends are horrified to hear that Biden is going to run again. The joke is that they become even more horrified as they consider the alternatives. (And this is more evidence that SNL doesn’t just skew the right.)

Kamala Harris is quickly discarded. The woman that Republicans thought was being anointed or who would depose Biden just a few years ago is now someone that most Democrats want nothing to do with. Cory Booker is cast aside with barely a mention. A Beto mailer slides under the door. But the real horror comes from a bloody “Bernie” written on the wall and a man who is seemingly possessed by the Hillary campaign.

None of these candidates seem able to catch the imagination of Democratic voters, let alone general election voters. In fact, most of them have already had at least one crack at a presidential campaign and failed quickly.

Looking back at 2020, there was a plethora of candidates vying for the nomination. If we look back at the polling averages on Real Clear Politics, we see that several candidates surged at various times but were never able to knock Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders out of the top spots.

Kamala Harris was the first to surge in July 2019 but quickly faded due to weak campaign skills and staff infighting. Elizabeth Warren was a strong contender but failed to gain traction outside the progressive wing of the party. Pete Buttigieg enjoyed a brief blip, but no candidate has ever gone directly from mayor to president. Michael Bloomberg also surged toward the end of March, but he is now totally forgotten by the party.

There were other candidates that year as well. Andrew Yang inspired a devoted following and was last seen working with the Forward Party. Tulsi Gabbard left Congress and joined the right, speaking at CPAC and appearing on Tucker Carlson’s show. Amy Klobuchar, still a Minnesota senator, was popular among moderates but never climbed out of single digits.

So let’s go down the list of possible Democrats for 2024 and I’ll explain why they can’t win the nomination.

Kamala Harris - The vice president is usually the heir apparent, but Kamala is not popular in her own party, has little charisma, and hasn’t stood out in her current job. In 2020, this black candidate could not win the support of black Democrats over Joe Biden.

Bernie Sanders - Democrats realize that Bernie is toxic. Last time, they were more united in opposition to Bernie than in favor of Biden. I don’t see any reason to think that will change.

Hillary - Just no. Add to the huge disappointment of 2016 that Hillary will be 77 in 2024. If the object is to find a younger candidate, look elsewhere.

Pete Buttigieg - Mayor Pete led Joe Biden in a University of New Hampshire poll from last July, but Buttigieg has little experience as a national or even statewide campaigner and is short on executive experience. His homosexuality won’t hurt him in the Democratic primary but would be more of an issue in the general election. Buttigieg is a likely option for a vice presidential pick.

Elizabeth Warren - Warren has been out of the limelight for most of the past two years. She’s an intelligent woman who is popular among progressives, but she would have a tough time bringing the various Democratic factions together.

Beto O’Rourke - Beto is a Democratic rockstar, but after two failed attempts at Texas governor, few will trust him in a presidential campaign.

Stacey Abrams - Just reread what I wrote for Beto and substitute “Georgia” for “Texas.”

Gavin Newsom - The governor of California could be a strong candidate, but his association with California radicalism may turn off a lot of swing voters.

AOC - Don’t make me laugh.

Joe Manchin - The West Virginia senator would be a good pick for the general election, but he’d never survive the primary. Progressives would love to run him out of the party and he may face a strong challenge for his reelection to the Senate from the party’s left.

Amy Klobuchar - The Minnesota senator is too moderate for the progressives.

Gretchen Whitmer - The Michigan governor is polarizing and not very well known outside the political stan circles.

Jared Polis - Even fewer people know the Colorado governor.

John Bel Edwards - The Louisiana governor would be another moderate pick, but a pro-life politician isn’t going far in today’s Democratic Party.

The fact is that Joe Biden occupies a unique niche in Democratic politics. He is toward the right side of Democratic personalities, which makes him palatable to moderates and independents but puts him at a disadvantage with his own party’s progressives. Biden is able to offset this with his strong support among black Democrats, who tend to be more conservative.

To put it another way, Democrats think that Biden is too conservative and Republicans think that he’s too liberal. Strangely enough, that puts him pretty close to the center of American politics. And yes, I do think that includes issues such as abortion and guns where I realize my own conservative views are somewhat out of the mainstream.

Neither side will ever admit this though because they both think that they are the American majority. They’re both wrong. The American political landscape is split into rough thirds. At any given time, about a third are liberal, about a third are conservative, and about a third are moderate/unaffiliated/don’t pay attention. Since neither conservatives nor liberals are a majority, elections are typically decided by the middle third (although partisan turnout is also a big factor).

That’s why Joe Biden won in 2020. The Democratic candidate was the sane choice and was even more conservative in many respects than the Republican candidate. While Donald Trump ran a turn-out-the-base campaign, Joe Biden angled for the disaffected middle.

Biden was also aided by Trump’s own incompetence as a campaigner. Republicans made much of the fact that Biden rarely ventured out on the campaign trail. He didn’t have to. As Napoleon reportedly said, “Never interfere with the enemy when he is in the process of destroying himself.”

My money is on Joe Biden to take the Democratic nomination in 2024. I think a lot of the president’s unpopularity at the moment stems from inflation and economic problems, but those are easing. He has recent successes to point to and his somewhat conciliatory tone in the State of the Union will appeal to moderates (the ones that paid attention anyway).

More to the point, I just don’t see another Democrat on the horizon who can put together a coalition that unites the progressive wing with moderates and black voters. This point extends to the general election where Republicans are likely to be unified against any Democrat (unless Trump runs as an independent, but that’s a topic for another day).

Whether Joe could win a second term is also another question, but I think he would undoubtedly beat Donald Trump again. The Former Guy is just too toxic. Ron DeSantis is another question, but the primary fight between the two is shaping up to be a thermonuclear exchange. Already, Trump supporters are claiming that DeSantis was grooming high school girls.

The Republican Primary is going to be ugly. And the GOP may well split on the way to the general election. If that happens, it will be to the benefit of a Democratic candidate who can stay out of the way and not distract voters from the Republican civil war.

A candidate like Joe Biden.

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SOTU: I didn’t watch the entire State of the Union last night, but I did watch enough to see that President Biden gave a good performance. Whether you agree with the content of his speech or not, after showings like last night it’s hard to claim with a straight face that the president suffers from dementia (but some will undoubtedly do it). What I saw was a president who seemed eloquent, at least in the moment, and had both parties clapping and laughing. at least in the moment.

People who did watch the SOTU might wonder who was yelling at the president during the speech. In most cases, it seems to have been Marjorie Taylor Greene. The Hill reports that Greene heckled the president at several points. She seems not to have been the only one, but she is the one who was identified as doing it.

TWEET OF THE DAY: Speaking of Greene, the Georgia conspiracy nut briefly presided over the House while Speaker McCarthy was absent this week. This probably gives another indication of what McCarthy agreed to get his job and left many viewers troubled about the direction of a GOP that would put EmptyG in charge, no matter how briefly.

Thursday, February 2, 2023

A new Republican contender emerges

 The news broke on Wednesday that former South Carolina governor and ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley is about to throw her proverbial hat into the ring for the 2024 presidential race. Haley tweeted about a “big announcement” on February 15, and although numerous wags online speculated that she might be about to release a line of NFT trading cards, more reliable sources say that Haley intends to kick off her presidential campaign.

The big question is why?

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There are only two potential candidates that garner double-digits in 2024 Republican primary polling and Haley is not one of them. In most polling, Donald Trump is the clear front runner with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis nipping at his heels. Former Vice President Mike Pence typically takes third place and Haley checks in at fourth, just ahead of Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio, the only other potential candidates to score above one percent in the Real Clear Politics average.

Curiously, Haley previously said that she would not run if Trump did. In April 2021, she told the Associated Press, “I would not run if President Trump ran, and I would talk to him about it. That’s something that we’ll have a conversation about at some point if that decision is something that has to be made.”

An early Trump critic, Haley said in the same press conference, just three months after the insurrection, that she and Trump had a “great working relationship.”

Personally, I think Haley is a legitimate conservative, an experienced politician, and a formidable personality. What concerns me most about her is the weakness of character that I see in her relationship with Donald Trump.

As Time describes, she has alternately veered between criticism and adulation when it comes to Trump. In the days after the insurrection, Haley lamented, “He went down a path he shouldn’t have, and we shouldn’t have followed him, and we shouldn’t have listened to him. And we can’t let that ever happen again." 

“He’s not going to run for federal office again,” she predicted.

But then, mere months later in October 2021, she said, “We need him in the Republican Party. I don’t want us to go back to the days before Trump,” and even as she prepares to challenge her former boss, she seems unwilling to confront The Former Guy and his abuses of power.

In my estimation, what changed between April 2021 and January 2023 wasn’t some moral or ethical awakening about Donald Trump. It was more likely a realization last November that Donald Trump was a much weaker political force than most Republicans believed.

The rub is that even a weaker Trump is much stronger than any of his potential Republican opponents. Trump routinely polls in the mid-40s to mid-50s and typically holds a double-digit lead over Ron DeSantis, his nearest challenger. Obviously, what Haley and DeSantis and the others are banking on is that Trump will continue to weaken as his legal woes mount.

But will the challengers weaken before Trump does? DeSantis may already be fading n the polls. The two most recent surveys from late January show the younger Florida man, who isn’t yet officially running, in the 20s, down from a run of polls that had him in the 30s over the past few months. For her part, Haley has yet to catch on at all. In the Republican primary, they are playing on Trump’s turf and they know it.

It may be more likely that Haley is counting on a presidential campaign to attract Trump’s notice as a potential running mate. She was reportedly considered for the position by both Mitt Romney in 2012 and Donald Trump in 2016. She was also floated as a replacement for Mike Pence in the 2020 election.

If Haley continues to treat Trump with kid gloves on the campaign trail, it may be a sign that her campaign is really an audition for the VP slot. If breaks with Trump and takes him on directly, she’s playing to win. A Republican candidate can’t win without beating Trump, but the two things Trump can’t stand are disloyalty and criticism.

For my part, even though I have admired Haley in the past, I feel pretty strongly that if any former Trump Administration members want to win higher office, they need to unequivocally break with Trump. In particular, they need to break with him on his actions following the 2020 election leading up to January 6, but there’s a lot of stuff that went on in the Trump Administration that Republicans need to repent for.

Ideally, all Republicans would go through this process, but I’m willing to be a little more lenient on state-level Republicans who didn’t work directly with Trump. Many of these officials have already been quietly distancing themselves from The Former Guy for years. I’d love for them to be more vocal about it, but today’s Republican Party is what it is and you just can’t be too critical of Trump and still win the primary. (My readers will know that I have different problems with Ron DeSantis despite the fact that he is not a Trump insider.)

Silence on the issue of the insurrection and Trump’s attempt to steal the election isn’t great, but it’s at least somewhat understandable. However, the people who worked directly with Trump and enabled him during his term need to be held to a higher standard. Voters shouldn’t allow them to straddle the fence.

People like Nikki Haley, who have been wishy-washy about Trump’s many abuses of power, should not be trusted with power on their own. As recently as a couple of years ago, I thought that Haley might bridge the gap between Never Trump conservatives and MAGA Republicans, but she stubbornly refuses to make amends for her part in Trump’s bad behavior and even after the insurrection lauded him as a Great Republican.

For that reason, I’m out.

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KEMP GETS SOME SPOTLIGHT: Over the weekend, Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp got some attention as a possible presidential contender. Kemp has not announced any intention to run, having just been elected to a second four-year term as governor, but Cook Political Report was among several outlets noting that the Georgian is “well-positioned” as a potential contender. I’d just like to point out that our longtime readers heard it here first in my piece from last May.


MY EGGZEPTIONAL WIFE: I hate to toot the competition’s horn, but Harvest Prude of The Dispatch recently interviewed my wife for an article about egg prices. My lovely bride, Debi, has long kept chickens, “the pet that poops breakfast,” and had some tips for potential chicken owners who are seeking to save on eggs. Read the article here. Maybe we’ll have to have Debi do a how-to piece for Racket News.


By the Racket News