Orlando Sentinel

Michelle Obama showed why these Dems are our last best hope

-

days before us. I’m referring to the stakes of the days ahead. They’re immeasurab­le.

Never in my 55 years has the Democrats’ success mattered more for the welfare, the sanity — the future — of these United States than now, because never has the other fork in the road been a Republican president as profoundly amoral, fundamenta­lly corrupt and flatly incompeten­t as the one seeking four more years.

What I saw on Monday night wasn’t something to be parsed or graded. It was something to rush toward and relish: a buffet for the starving. It was salvation. I have zero interest in decreeing whether the mashed potatoes were suitably fluffy or the asparagus overcooked.

Instead I want to note that nowhere in Donald Trump’s inner circle is there anyone with the gravitas and grace of Michelle Obama, because someone like her wouldn’t last a nanosecond there.

I want to savor her every word on Monday night, when she so beautifull­y distilled what’s wrong with Trump — “He simply cannot be who we need him to be for us,” she said — and so hauntingly defined what it feels like to live in Trump’s America.

“Kids in this country are seeing what happens when we stop requiring empathy of one another,” she said. “They’re looking around wondering if we’ve been lying to them this whole time about who we really are and what we truly value.”

“What’s going on this country is just not right,” she added. “This is not who we want to be.” It was an excellent speech, gorgeously delivered, and that’s in large part because she recognized and maximized the fact that many Americans see her as someone less partisan and more practical than the convention­al convention orator.

“You know I hate politics,” she said, making no apologies for that. “But you also know that I care about this nation. You know how much I care about all of our children.” From that perspectiv­e came this plea: “We have got to vote for Joe Biden like our lives depend on it.”

There was much talk beforehand about the Democrats’ ardent desire and assiduous efforts to project unity.

To my eyes and ears they took things to a higher level than that, not because they have such a talent for diplomacy or such a gift for television choreograp­hy but because they obviously and genuinely and passionate­ly share the conviction that if Biden fails, America falls — at least the America that we’re all still trying to hold on to.

“During this president’s term, the unthinkabl­e has become normal,” Sanders said during his remarks. “The future of our democracy is at stake. The future of our economy is as stake. The future of our planet is as stake.”

He specifical­ly and pointedly instructed his frustrated supporters to get with the program and vote for Biden. “We must come together,” he said. “My friends, the price of failure is just too great to imagine.” He didn’t sound quite like this in 2016. Back then the damage from a Trump presidency was merely predicted, theoretica­l. Now it’s on the unemployme­nt lines and in the morgue.

This convention isn’t without its ideologica­l tussles, bruised egos and other offscreen drama. But anyone who’s focused on that has lost the big picture. Anyone who’s focused on that can’t recognize how many of the compliment­s bestowed on Biden on Monday night could never be given to Trump.

I’m talking about simple compliment­s, like when Kasich praised Biden as “a man of faith, a unifier.”

Or when Rep. James Clyburn deemed him “as good a man as he is a leader.” Not even the practiced liars who prop up Trump try to get away with calling him “good.”

Biden doesn’t have everything I wish for in a president, but he has goodness, and for a country that needs to reclaim its decency, re-establish its dignity and right its course, that’s not a bad place to start.

The Democrats’ show will go on for three more nights, but I don’t need to watch another second to know what’s what.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States