Chattanooga Times Free Press

TO BEAT TRUMP, BUILD A BETTER BIDEN

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If the election were held today, Joe Biden would crush President Donald Trump. Almost any other Democrat — including one named Generic Democrat — would also beat the man who runs an administra­tion of kooks, quacks, criminals, drunks, wife-beaters and grifters.

Sadly, there remains a sizable constituen­cy for incompeten­cy on this scale — the look-the-other-way evangelica­ls, the getyours-while-you-can corporate class, theditch-your-principles Republican officehold­ers. They’re with Stupid, no matter how much Trump debases the office.

But you can’t beat nothing with better-than-nothing. Not-Trump is not enough. Quick: What are Democrats for? Continuity With Change? Stronger Together? A Better Deal? Two of those are actual slogans of the national party, and one is from the feckless politician on “Veep.”

If you were to go into a lab and create a perfect candidate for 2020, along with a popular policy prescripti­on for this anxious decade, what would that look like? It would be a big-hearted, progressiv­e person whose appeal crosses class lines. It would be someone very much like Biden — a younger Biden. Let’s ignore the age issue for now.

Your candidate would need to be ethically clean — no Wall Street speeches, no foundation­s that serve as backdoor ways to do well while doing good, no sexual misconduct.

It might help if your candidate was not from the political class. Oprah? She’s not interested, so she says. Sheryl Sandberg of Facebook showed some promise until we all realized that social media had been weaponized to destroy democracy. Entreprene­ur Mark Cuban? Haven’t we had enough of a reality show star playing at being president?

This gets you to the bench of elected officials. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, the junior senator from New York, is a whirlwind of Big Ideas of late. She just unveiled a financial first step for paycheck-to-paycheck Americans: a plan to require every post office to offer basic banking services — an alternativ­e to predatory payday loans.

She has gotten ahead of the one-note socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders on the idea of a job guarantee for everyone who wants to work. The problem there is cost (up to a half-trillion dollars, by some estimates) and the bureaucrat­ic nightmare it could create.

Much of the party’s energy is coming from the Sanders wing; Sanders himself will be 79 on Election Day 2020 and is not getting any less cranky. But don’t overlook the enthusiasm generated by Texas Senate candidate Beto O’Rourke or Montana Gov. Steve Bullock. They’ve stood up for the basic right of health care and against the wrong of more tax cuts for the rich — foundation­al positions favored by a majority of the country.

Another prospect is the Senate’s resident vegan, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey. He’s got some Wall Street problems and is less populist than the mood of the country. But he has terrific political skills.

In the same class is rookie Sen. Kamala Harris of California. She’s sharp and dynamic, with the right balance of ego and intellect. But how would a California liberal play in Scranton, Penn.?

That brings us back to Scranton-born Biden. A new study suggests that fear of cultural displaceme­nt was a greater driver for Trump voters than economic anxiety — identity politics for aging white males. It would seem to take some of the working-class-savior reasoning out of Uncle Joe’s candidacy.

But that analysis still doesn’t adequately explain the millions of people who voted for both Barack Obama and Trump. That’s where Biden comes in, and why he cleans up against Trump in early matchups. The problem is that he will be 77 on Election Day.

Trump will be 74. He’s old and he’s angry, and he will only get older and angrier. Build a better Biden, from our political lab, and you win. But maybe the current Biden is built to last, with just enough septuagena­rian strut to end the dark age of Trump.

 ??  ?? Timothy Egan
Timothy Egan

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