Las Vegas Review-Journal

Don’t run, Mr. Biden Frank Bruni

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Considerat­ion No. 1 in choosing a Democratic nominee in 2020 is making sure he or she is the person best positioned to defeat President Donald Trump, right? Then what would you say if I told you we should put our chips on a man who failed miserably at two previous campaigns for the nomination? And that when he applied the lessons from his first debacle, in 1988, to his second bid two decades later, he did no better, placing fifth in the Iowa caucuses and folding his tent before even the New Hampshire primary?

And that he spent nearly 45 years in Washington, a proper noun that’s a dirty word in presidenti­al politics? And that his record includes laws and episodes that are reviled by the female and black voters? And that, on Election Day, he will be 77, which is 31 years older than Bill Clinton was in 1992, 30 years older than Barack Obama was in 2008 and a complete contradict­ion of the party’s success over the past half-century with relatively youthful candidates? You’d tell me I was of unsound mind. Well, Joe Biden’s boosters are. There’s a swell of talk about a Biden candidacy. He recently told an audience in Montana that none of the other Democrats eyeing the White House are as qualified as he is, and it sounded like the beginnings of a stump speech.

If Biden took away from the 2016 election that qualificat­ions rule the day, I’d urge him to ask Hillary Clinton how consoling her impeccable credential­s are and then to educate me on the gold-plated wonders of Trump’s CV.

A national poll showed that Biden was ahead of other Democrats in a hypothetic­al primary field, winning 25 percent of respondent­s — ahead of Bernie Sanders (15 percent), Hillary Clinton (13 percent), Beto O’rourke (9 percent) and Elizabeth Warren, Cory Booker and Kamala Harris (under 5 percent each). But that’s name recognitio­n multiplied by nostalgia. And nostalgia is a risky currency and an odd fit for a party that last claimed the White House with a mantra of hope and change.

An article about Biden in The Atlantic said that “people keep coming up to him everywhere he goes” to profess their longing and love. It quoted one 89-year-old woman who told Biden: “If you promise to run, I’ll promise to stay alive long enough to vote for you.” She clearly admires him very much.

I do, too. He’s an admirable person. How I wish that mattered more in terms of the outcome of a presidenti­al election than it obviously does. He pressed on with public service long after he could have cashed in. His devotion to his family is palpable; his strength through its tragedies, extraordin­ary. He’s informed, he’s affable and he’s real.

Butishethe best bet? The difference between four and eight years of Trump could be everything; this is a time for ruthlessly unemotiona­l calculatio­n. Show me persuasive evidence that the president’s most fearsome adversary is an avocado and I’ll whip up the correspond­ing parapherna­lia: Make America Guac Again.

And you know what? By the time 2020 rolls around, perhaps an avocado could beat Trump. We await special counsel Robert Mueller’s report while being reminded daily of how staggering­ly thorough his inquiry has been. We could be on the cusp of a recession. Even amid strong economic indicators, voters issued a clear repudiatio­n of Trump in the midterm elections, as Democrats picked up at least 40 House seats.

But we should plan for a worst-case scenario — for a Trump who’s wounded but not critically or who has managed to hit some kind of herky-jerky homestretc­h stride. We should be cleareyed about each Democratic contender’s shortcomin­gs and vulnerabil­ities.

Biden, who followed 36 years as a senator from Delaware with eight as Obama’s vice president, has many. His record is one of them. There’s prodigious accomplish­ment there but also trouble: his stern treatment of Anita Hill when she appeared before the Senate Judiciary Committee, of which he was chairman; his role as an ambassador for the financial services industry in Delaware; his key part in the passage of crime bills that ended up punishing African-americans disproport­ionately. None of that jibes with his party’s current priorities and mood.

The very scope of that record isn’t ideal. “It would be so nice, after Hillary, to have someone without years and years of votes and baggage,” one Democratic strategist told me. Biden’s long history, she added, “is a treasure trove for any opponent.”

Then there’s Biden’s famous propensity for cringe-inducing gaffes. Maybe those would be less noticeable or relevant than before, given the nature and nuttiness of Trump’s expectorat­ions.

But maybe they’d muffle the substance of his message. Between his verbal fumbling, his attempts to recover from them and all the shiny, meaningles­s objects that Trump gets journalist­s to chase, a Biden-trump matchup could turn into a total circus, and who flourishes in that kind of habitat? Trump.

While Biden, 76, is only four years older than Trump, Democrats have had more luck over recent decades with presidenti­al candidates younger than their Republican opponents. “In the last century, the party has never won with a non-incumbent who was older than 52,” Thor Hogan, who teaches politics at Earlham College, wrote in The Washington Post.

That “makes perfect sense,” Hogan added. “Democrats are the party of progress, of hope and of change.”

They’re already straining that brand with their trio of top leaders in the House: Nancy Pelosi, 78; Steny Hoyer, 79; and Jim Clyburn, 78. They’re going to plump up the septuagena­rian society further with their 2020 nominee? “It would be tragic for Democrats to squander an obvious chance at an age and health and vigor and generation­al contrast to Trump,” another Democratic strategist said.

That’s a contrast plenty of local Democratic operatives want. On the same day that Biden trumpeted his qualificat­ions in Montana, The Wall Street Journal reported that it had surveyed the Democratic chairmen and chairwomen of all 99 counties in Iowa; that 76 responded; and that while there was no consensus on the issues or positions that a 2020 nominee should emphasize, 43 of these leaders indicated a preference for “a young candidate” and “a fresh face.”

As that latter phrase suggests, Biden’s problem isn’t just age. A candidate can be old in years and relatively new to presidenti­al politics (Elizabeth Warren, 69; Mike Bloomberg, 76) or old in years and the champion of new directions (Bernie Sanders, 77). Neither of those descriptio­ns applies to Biden.

His party can’t get enough of the word “progressiv­e,” but he’s regressive, symbolizin­g a step back to an administra­tion past. Don’t get me wrong: That’s infinitely preferable to the indecent present. But it’s a questionab­le campaign slogan.

Biden has said he’ll decide in the next month or two whether to run — whether he’s willing to spend that much time away from his grandchild­ren. For their sake, I hope he stays on the sidelines. For our sake, too.

 ?? MADDIE MCGARVEY / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Former Vice President Joe Biden speaks at a campaign rally Nov. 3 in Ohio.
MADDIE MCGARVEY / THE NEW YORK TIMES Former Vice President Joe Biden speaks at a campaign rally Nov. 3 in Ohio.

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