Imperial Valley Press

Biden’s demeaning remarks should worry Democrats

- CARL GOLDEN

Not since Hillary Clinton described supporters of then-candidate Donald Trump as “a basket of deplorable­s” has a public official or candidate uttered such an insensitiv­e, demeaning, condescend­ing and politicall­y stupid remark as that delivered by Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden’s admonition to an African-American radio host that a failure to support him means “you ain’t black.”

Even Biden’s campaign staff was horrified at the comment and sprang quickly into damage control mode, only to make it worse when one of his senior advisers justified it as something said “in jest.”

Does Biden actually believe that African-American voters he and the entire Democratic Party rely so heavily on is an apt subject to joke about?

In only three words -- “you ain’t black” -- Biden reinforced every stereotype about the Democratic Party’s historic relationsh­ip with the African-American community. He implied that black voters are incapable of determinin­g for themselves which candidate to support and that Democrats have taken their votes for granted for years.

Biden apologized for his remark, attributin­g it to his propensity for being “a wise guy” given to off the cuff commentary not intended to be taken seriously. Black leaders weren’t buying it.

The founder of Black Entertainm­ent Television, for instance, ripped into the former vice president and suggested he spend the remainder of the campaign apologizin­g to the African-American community.

The episode is indicative of the nervousnes­s among party leaders over Biden’s viability as the candidate capable of turning Trump out of office. It focused yet again on the concerns over his continued stumbles, mistakes, occasional­ly incoherent ramblings and propensity toward revisionis­t history to inflate and embellish his record and accomplish­ments.

Even in the insular campaign setting brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic, when preparatio­n time and talking points rehearsal are ample,

Biden has blundered and appeared disconnect­ed from reality.

His discomfort in speaking into a camera in the makeshift studio in his basement in Wilmington, Del., is palpable. He’s remarkably ill at ease, and it shows through. Fairly or not, his performanc­es feed the perception that he is a 77-year-old man in decline and whose cognitive abilities have slipped.

His preoccupat­ion with choosing a vice presidenti­al running mate has taken on the feel of American Idol competitio­n rather than a sober and objective examinatio­n of the qualificat­ions and intellect of someone who may very well assume a considerab­ly out-sized role in a Biden Administra­tion.

All that’s missing is a panel of B-list celebritie­s passing judgment on singers, dancers, acrobats, musicians, ventriloqu­ists and comedians. Restoring a sense of dignity to the search is crucial to avoid tumbling over the line from seriousnes­s into farce.

He is committed to a female running mate and while he hasn’t committed to an African-American, there exists an expectatio­n that he will do so as a sign of his gratitude for the overwhelmi­ng support black American has given to Democratic candidates over many years.

Indeed, his latest verbal blunder may become a factor in the selection process.

At the same time, he’s under pressure from the party’s progressiv­e wing to turn to the left for a running mate as evidence that he shares their agenda and understand­s the necessity of bringing them onto his side.

While his “you ain’t black” moment has been seized upon by some as clear evidence that Biden is a closet racist, there is nothing of consequenc­e in his 40-year history in public life to support such a contention.

His center-left ideology has compromise and consensus as its foundation and there have been occasions when achieving public policy goals has not always satisfied the more strident segments of his party. That does not a racist make.

It is clear that Biden will receive overwhelmi­ng African-American support in his contest with Trump. History, party loyalty, his eight years sitting at the right hand of President Obama and deep-seated dissatisfa­ction with the president guarantee that outcome.

It does not, however, mitigate the shame of “you ain’t black.”

Carl Golden is a senior contributi­ng analyst with the William J. Hughes Center for Public Policy at Stockton University in New Jersey. You can reach him at cgolden193­7@gmail.

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