Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

If Joe Biden wins

- Bret Stephens is a New York Times columnist. Bret Stephens

If Joe Biden wins the Democratic nomination, I’ll worry that his candidacy might be doomed. Doomed by Sanders supporters who, out of pique, will sit out the election; doomed by a throwback messenger with no particular­ly stirring message; doomed by hints of infirmity that many voters find worrisome and that Donald Trump will exploit with crass efficiency.

If, despite this, Biden wins the presidency, I’ll worry that, as a potential one-termer, he’ll bend too far to appease his party’s progressiv­e wing. That he’ll do so in order to cut a figure for history. That he’ll over-empower federal agencies, over-regulate business, and overtax individual­s. That he’ll appoint judges with cramped views of religious liberty and free speech. That he’ll resume a policy of appeasemen­t toward Iran.

Then again, if Biden wins, there will be other things that, for a change, I won’t have to worry about. And most of these will be the things that really matter.

If Biden wins only the nomination, I won’t have to worry that there’s a fair chance that, in Bernie Sanders, a man could be elected president who, without nuance or discrimina­tion, demonizes entire sectors of American industry. I won’t have to worry about getting my health insurance taken from me or watch my savings shrink to nothing thanks to monetary policy on the Weimar Republic model. I won’t have to worry that the self-described “dirtbag left” will become to the Democratic Party what the Hannity-Carlson-Ingraham right is to the Republican Party.

I won’t have to worry that not one but both major U.S. parties have become unrecogniz­able from what they were five years ago, that they’ve succumbed to their respective extremes, that nowhere in American politics do centrists have sway, and that on nothing is compromise possible. And if Biden wins the White House?

In that case, I won’t have to worry about the president trying to criminaliz­e his political opponent. Not with demagogic chants of “Lock her up” nor with quiet attempts to strong-arm an ally for the sake of digging up dirt on an American citizen. I won’t have to worry about White House officials being forced to choose between ethical obligation­s and loyalty to the president. I won’t have to worry about an attorney general who chooses loyalty over obligation—and a year later is bluntly reprimande­d by a Republican-appointed federal judge for doing so.

If Biden wins, I won’t have to fear that the president might order the abrogation of a freetrade agreement with a major trading partner, only for a watchful adviser to snatch the order from his desk before he can sign it. I won’t have to read about frantic aides wondering if the president is really serious about his threats to withdraw the U.S. from NATO. I won’t have to cross my fingers hoping that a clever general will convince the president that the reason we shouldn’t betray our desperate Kurdish allies in Syria is so we can keep the oil.

If Biden wins, I won’t have to watch another press conference like Trump’s in Helsinki. I won’t have to wonder why the president seized his own translator’s notes after a meeting with Vladimir Putin. I won’t have to hear paeans of praise sung for North Korea’s ogreish tyrant or for Turkey’s pernicious strongman or for China’s cult-of-personalit­y despot.

If Biden wins, I won’t have to read that the president has told fellow American lawmakers to “go back” to their countries of birth or ancestry.

If Biden wins, I won’t have to listen to the president call members of my profession the “enemy of the American people.” Or people of my political viewpoint “human scum.” Or colleagues “stone cold losers.” I won’t have to spend time wondering whether being an unindicted co-conspirato­r in a hush-money scandal rises to the level of an impeachabl­e offense. I won’t have to steer family conversati­ons away from politics lest they veer into X-rated territory. If Biden wins, the word “Stormy” will refer only to weather, and “Daniels” only to whiskey.

If Biden wins, I will write column after column opposing him on policy grounds. But at least I’ll feel relief that the American people didn’t vindicate Trumpism and the nativism and meanness it represents.

If Biden wins, he will amuse, embarrass and probably alarm me with his gaffes, misstateme­nts and memory lapses. But I’ll never feel ashamed to think of him as my president, much less to root for his success.

If Biden wins, it will not mean a great American presidency. It will mean a decent one. That will be more than enough for me.

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