Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Democrats really do not practice what they preach

- Cal Thomas Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

If Joe Biden survives recounts and several lawsuits filed by the Trump campaign into what Donald Trump says has been widespread vote-counting fraud (we await proof ), do not expect him to be hounded over his and Hunter Biden’s business ties to China and Ukraine as President Trump has been over “Russian collusion” charges and numerous other attempts by Democrats, the left and the media to undermine his administra­tion.

In an address to the nation Saturday, presumptiv­e President-elect Biden claimed he has been given a “mandate for action on COVID, the economy, climate change (and) systemic racism.” He called for healing and unity.

Biden reportedly plans to issue a slew of executive orders, reversing those by President Trump. It is his right, but how does that promote healing and unity? For Democrats, healing and unity often means bowing to their policy wishes. It never seems towork in reverse.

Does Biden have a mandate on COVID? Would Americans, including business owners, accept a national lockdown that could cripple the economy?

What about open borders and lifting the ban on immigrants from nations that have experience­d and, in some cases, promoted terrorism? Does Biden have a mandate for that? Will he be anti-Israel, as some believe Barack Obamawas? Will Biden undermine peace agreements brokered by Trump between Israel and three Arab/ Muslim states? Was Trump’s impeachmen­t by Nancy Pelosi’s House a contributi­on to healing and unity?

The Biden economic plan includes tax increases and more spending. Biden also said, “the purpose of our politics isn’t total, unrelentin­g, un-ending warfare.” You wouldn’t knowit from the way Democrats behave, starting with their slander of Robert Bork during his hearing to become a justice of the Supreme Court— ditto Brett Kavanaugh— through the presidenti­al election of 2000, which many Democrats then and now claim illegitima­tely elected George W. Bush, to the 2016 election when they claimed Hillary Clinton should have won based on the popular vote and mounted a four-year political assault against the president.

Biden’s bromides sound comforting, but Democrats do not practice what they preach.

“Wemay be opponents, butwe are not enemies. We’re Americans,” he said. No credit to Abraham Lincoln. An earlier comment thatwe are not “red or blue states, but the United States” was taken from President Obama.

Speaking of Lincoln, who Democrats like to cite as a great Republican president, I am rereading Carl Sandburg’s brilliant four-volume work on Lincoln called “The War Years.” Sandburg quotes some of Lincoln’s many critics, including Democrats and the press at a time when the nation was evenmore divided.

After the 1860 election and before he was sworn in, the owner and editor of the New York Herald, James Gordon Bennett, called on Lincoln not to assume office: “A grand opportunit­y now exists for Lincoln to avert impending ruin, and invest his name with an immortalit­y far more enduring thatwould attach to it by his elevation to the Presidency.”

Trump critics planned to impeach him before hewas inaugurate­d and publicly said so.

Biden says hewants to bring us together? On which issues would he be willing to compromise and find common ground with Republican­s? To win the approval of Democrats and their media acolytes, Republican­s must lose elections and forfeit their principles.

The mystery is why somany Americans vote for Republican­s in one election and Democrats the next. Toomany it seems vote mainly on personalit­y and superficia­lities, not substantiv­e policies.

Itwas the media’s job to dig under the superficia­l and reveal the true Joe Biden (and Kamala Harris). They failed, becoming an extension of the Democratic Party and anti-Trumpers. If Biden’s policies fail don’t expect Democrats to admit it; they will blame R epublicans.

Mean while we are a bipolar nation, unlikely to unify.

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