Gulf Today

Carlson might have handed Duckworth the vice presidency

- Max Burns,

If Illinois Senator Tammy Duckworth eventually becomes Joe Biden’s vice presidenti­al nominee, pundits and historians will look back to Independen­ce Day weekend for the moment when her campaign jumped from insider gossip to mainstream appeal.

Duckworth has long been considered an outside contender for the vice presidency. Her resume is a Democratic dream: a combat veteran of the Iraq War, Duckworth sacrificed her legs in service to her country. Ater entering the House of Representa­tives in 2006 — flipping a Republican district long held by the abhorrent Henry Hyde, no less — Duckworth establishe­d herself as a progressiv­e legislator and an expert on military affairs. As a Senator, she enjoys a rare “Exceeds Expectatio­ns” rating from the Center for Effective Lawmaking.

There’s just one problem: before July, not that many people knew Tammy Duckworth existed. That changed on July 6, when Fox News host Tucker Carlson inexplicab­ly launched into a tirade about her fitness for the vice presidency.

“You’re not supposed to criticize Tammy Duckworth in any way because she once served in the military,” Carlson, America’s top-rated cable pundit, told his viewers. He pushed forward, calling Duckworth an “unimpressi­ve person” and openly questionin­g her patriotism.

“It’s a very strong charge and we try not to ever make it,” Carlson then said, before accusing Duckworth of hating America. What had Duckworth done to get Tucker so riled up? She suggested having a “national dialogue” about removing controvers­ial statues from public spaces.

That’s it. Tammy Duckworth dared to suggest we talk to each other.

On the list of stupid things a media figure can say on live television, questionin­g the patriotism of the Iraq War’s first female doubleampu­tee defies ranking. Carlson has never made a secret of the fact that he considers female legislator­s “silly” or “unserious.” His fixation on Nancy Pelosi and freshman Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-cortez hardly allows him to go a day without bringing it up. But there was something noticeably different about the national response to Carlson’s snide smearing of an American patriot.

Duckworth hit back later that evening, tweeting: “Does Tucker Carlson want to walk a mile in my legs and then tell me whether or not I love America?”

I would forgive Duckworth for wanting to take a swing at Carlson, or at least lobbing a few four-leter words his way. But her response showcases the yawning maturity gap separating people like Duckworth from Carlson. That’s understand­able: in November 2004, while Duckworth was undergoing emergency surgery to amputate her legs ater a horrific rocket attack on her Black Hawk helicopter, Tucker was offering Americans advice on how to loop and tug the perfect bow tie.

Carlson’s reprehensi­ble atacks on Duckworth mark a growing realizatio­n among Republican­s that a Duckworth vice presidency would be devastatin­g to the GOP. Revelation­s that President Donald Trump knew about a Russian plan to offer bounties for the murders of American soldiers abroad have shaken voters who long considered Republican­s reliable protectors of American military exceptiona­lism.

In Duckworth, Biden also finds something unique: a legitimizi­ng voice for Democrats among voters finally willing to reconsider the Republican Party’s monopoly on military and foreign policy issues.

The 2020 campaign cycle is unlike anything Americans have ever seen before. Voters across the country are searching for a candidate unafraid to lead with big, bold ideas that reshape the American political landscape. Vice President Tammy Duckworth would be a great start.

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Tammy Duckworth
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Tucker Carlson

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