Dayton Daily News

What Biden needs is 2020’s Sister Souljah moment

- GeorgeF. Will GeorgeWill writes forThe Washington­Post.

Although tightly scripted to prevent spontaneit­y from disrupting worship, the Republican National Convention had a suspensefu­l moment Monday when Vice President Mike Pence spoke. Connoisseu­rs of his defining rhetorical trope started their stopwatche­s: Could he talk for 60 seconds without bragging about his humility? He went 58 seconds before saying that being there was “deeply humbling.” Even in today’s turbulence, there is one constant.

Let us now praise Republican­s for embracing their defects. Having nothing to say, they said as much. Rather than tamper with perfection, they said their 2016 platform would suffice until 2024, when the party will presumably saysomethi­ng other than: We desire what Dear Leader desires.

Seemingly every Trump family member who does not detest the president addressed the convention, producing an instructiv­e tableau for this populist moment: In America, vulgarity is not the prerogativ­e of any particular class. The rapacious Snopes family is not just a figment of William Faulkner’s Mississipp­i imaginatio­n; there is a living analogue from Manhattan.

In an ABC interview before the Republican convention, Joe Biden reprised then-Vice President George H.W. Bush’s promise to the 1988 Republican convention: “Read my lips, no new taxes.” Biden promised there would be “no new taxes” on those earning less than $400,000 a year because, “there would be no need for any.”

This is the familiar progressiv­e flinch: Propose a multitrill­ion-dollar agenda that Americans supposedly desire, but reassure 98% of households that they need not demonstrat­e their desire by helping to pay for the agenda. As for there being “no need” for any more taxes, need is a malleable concept.

Regarding the nation’s most pressing constituti­onal problem, unfettered executive power, the 2020 election apparently offers more an echo than a choice. Biden was asked in the ABC interview if he would “shut this country down” if scientists recommende­d doing so. Sounding as blasé about legalities as the current president is, Biden said: “I would shut it down.”

But if President Harry S. Truman could not seize the steel mills to forestall a strike during wartime, Biden cannot close the entire economy. The Constituti­on does not give the president the general police power that state constituti­ons give to governors.

Biden’s biggest advantage in the post-Labor Day sprint is that he has an even easier presidenti­al act to follow than Franklin D. Roosevelt had running against Herbert Hoover in 1932. But this advantage could evaporate if rioting and looting continue, and millions of voters become convinced that Democrats are complicit in — because tolerant of — the shredding of the nation’s social fabric. Is or is not Biden disgusted by mob violence in the service of political nihilism? (“Let’s protest police injustices by torching an automobile dealership!”)

He needs a Sister Souljah moment. In 1992 this rap singer was pleased by deadly L.A. riots following acquittal of police officers involved in the Rodney King beating: “If black people kill black people every day, why not have a week and kill white people?” Candidate Bill Clinton’s criticism, not of extremism in general but of her explicitly, reassured temperate voters that he was not intimidate­d by inhabitant­s of the wilder shores of American politics.

Today, even more than 28 years ago, the Democratic nominee needs to display similar independen­ce. Biden’s response last week — 43 seconds of a tepid, 93-second video tweet — will not suffice.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States