Gulf News

Biden can beat Trump if he doesn’t blow it

Being stuck at home during an election year may be a good thing for the former US vice-president

- BY CHARLES M. BLOW ■ Charles M. Blow is a columnist and the author of Fire Shut Up in My Bones.

As the United States’ death toll raced toward 100,000, Donald Trump went golfing. The number of deaths never had to reach such a staggering figure — and it will surely climb far beyond it — but it did because in the early days, Trump made excuses for the Chinese response, dragged his feet on an American response, and repeatedly made statements that defied truth and science.

Trump put politics, his own political fortunes, over the lives of the American people, and the result has been catastroph­ic.

As CNN has reported, researcher­s at Columbia University created a model gauging transmissi­on rates from March 15 to May 3, and found that if the United States had started social distancing just two weeks earlier, it could have prevented 84 per cent of deaths and 82 per cent of cases.

But Trump had spent the previous week downplayin­g the severity of the virus and blaming growing coverage of it and alarm over it on the media.

On March 10, when there were 959 confirmed cases and 28 deaths, Trump said to reporters after a meeting with Republican senators: “We’re prepared, and we’re doing a great job with it. And it will go away. Just stay calm. It will go away.”

The very next day the World Health Organisati­on declared Covid-19 a pandemic, but it wasn’t until March 13 that Trump declared the virus a national emergency, and it wasn’t until March 16 that he announced social distancing guidelines.

But, that may well have been too late. The virus wasn’t aware of the politics of the moment. The virus wasn’t aware that he had been lying and deflecting. The virus wasn’t aware that it should wait until the American president was cowed into correct action. It was doing what viruses do: It was spreading and it was killing.

Trying to rewrite reality

Trump dragged his feet, trying to con his way through a pandemic, to rewrite reality, to pacify the public until the virus passed, and that has led to untold numbers of people dead who never had to die.

There is not only blood on Trump’s hands, he is drenched in it like the penultimat­e scene from the movie Carrie.

In America, this is Donald Trump’s plague, and he is yoked with that going into the election in November.

Joe Biden needs to do little, despite what many pundits may think. He doesn’t need a daily presence in the news. He doesn’t need to “own the internet.” In fact, his being stuck in his house and giving limited interviews from his basement may be the best thing to ever happen to his campaign.

Biden is a well-known gaffe machine. Every time he speaks, there is the very real chance that he will do more damage than good. America doesn’t need that. We just need a person to replace

Trump who is, for one thing, not so cavalier about deaths connected to his poor response or poor policy — whether they be hurricane victims in Puerto Rico, children separated from their parents at the border or victims of a virus.

But, Biden continues to commit unforced error, like the hubbub he created and later apologised for when he said at the end of an interview with The Breakfast Club’s Charlamagn­e: “If you have a problem figuring out whether you’re for me or Trump, then you ain’t black.”

It was so cavalier and comfortabl­e that it was shocking. Biden doesn’t get to define blackness nor excommunic­ate anyone from it. But that wasn’t the only problem in the interview. He said just seconds after that statement that “The NAACP has endorsed me every time I’ve run.”

That never happened, and the NAACP had to release a statement to clarify that it “is a non-partisan organisati­on and does not endorse candidates for political office.”

This is not the first time Biden has lied about his relationsh­ip to the black community. He has repeatedly lied over the years about marching in the civil rights movement, even though advisers warned him to stop it.

What gives? None of this is necessary. Compared to Trump’s avalanche of lies, these may seem small, but for black voters, particular­ly younger, more leery ones, they are baffling and off-putting.

Biden has a good chance to beat Trump in the wake of his disastrous pandemic response, if Biden doesn’t blow it.

 ?? Muhammed Nahas ©Gulf News ??
Muhammed Nahas ©Gulf News

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