Imperial Valley Press

Biden would pay a steep price for skipping debates

- CARL GOLDEN

If the trial balloon floated by Democrats gains altitude and Joe Biden withdraws from participat­ion in the three scheduled presidenti­al debates, it will surely go down as one of the most egregious blunders in presidenti­al election history.

For someone who for months has fought off rumors and speculatio­n about his declining mental nimbleness, Biden’s withdrawal from the debates would confirm for many the validity of the rumors and accuracy of the speculatio­n.

Remaining sequestere­d in his basement is central to his campaign strategy, a belief that he benefits greatly from President Trump’s erratic and undiscipli­ned behavior while remaining out of the media spotlight and studiously avoiding interviews and public appearance­s.

Biden’s history is one of misstateme­nts, rambling responses and embellishi­ng his personal role in a variety of incidents. At times, he appears befuddled and incapable of maintainin­g a cogent train of thought. His ability to ad lib -- a debate essential -- is non-existent. And when attacked as he was during the Democratic Party primary season, his responses often verge on the unintellig­ible.

In his most recent interview, Biden grew agitated over a question and angrily implied that the questioner was addicted to cocaine.

Using friendly media to raise the possibilit­y of ditching the debates seems like a calculated move by the campaign to assess the public reaction and, if necessary, develop a plausible cover story to rationaliz­e a withdrawal.

One columnist went so far as to propose that since Biden had nothing to gain and everything to lose in a debate with Trump, there was no legitimate reason to engage the President.

Translatio­n: I’ll probably lose, so I won’t participat­e.

Another pundit characteri­zed presidenti­al debates as having outlived their usefulness and were no longer relevant, while still another offered the astounding­ly silly suggestion that Biden should refuse to debate unless Trump released his income tax returns.

Biden’s campaign quickly reiterated their candidate’s eagerness to debate in what resembled a “whistling past the graveyard” response.

The obvious cover story for skipping the debates would be concern for personal safety in the face of an unpreceden­ted public health crisis -- the same rationale Biden is currently utilizing to remain in his basement.

However, with major league baseball, profession­al basketball and hockey having resumed their seasons -- albeit abbreviate­d ones -- voters would react skepticall­y to an argument that Trump and Biden standing more than 6 feet apart for 90 minutes in an empty auditorium poses a threat to either one.

Presidenti­al debates have become a vital element of campaignin­g. For the overwhelmi­ng number of voters, taking the measure of presidenti­al candidates responding to media questions and making their case for leading the country is as close as they’ll ever come to personal contact.

Refusing to participat­e because of a deep fear of embarrassi­ng oneself or appearing unprepared to take on the burdens of the presidency is not an acceptable explanatio­n.

Despite his seclusion, Biden has built and maintained a lead in numerous national and swing state polling. However, believing that public distaste for Trump is so deep it will negate significan­t adverse reaction to rejecting 60 years of presidenti­al debate tradition is foolishly short-sighted.

To be sure, Trump is in his element during one-on-one debates. He enjoys nothing more than standing in the center of the ring throwing haymaker after haymaker, hoping one will land with devastatin­g consequenc­es.

Unconcerne­d with the veracity of his assertions, he is the embodiment of the ancient Greek prophecy: “In war, truth is the first casualty.” For Trump, the debate is war.

Biden, though, must demonstrat­e he’s willing to mix it up, to stand tall, challenge Trump and demolish once and for all the man-in-decline narrative.

Whatever his and his staff’s misgivings, his debate participat­ion is imperative. Failure to do so will add a third question to the nation’s political lore:

Should Nixon have burned the Watergate tapes?

Did Bill Clinton have sex with a

White House intern?

Should Biden debate Trump?

Yes, yes and yes.

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