The Commercial Appeal

Biden battling Trump for the American soul

- Your Turn

American political convention­s are an odd tradition. In theory, they are about formulatin­g policies and choosing candidates. But it’s been 68 years since a party risked not choosing a presidenti­al candidate on the first ballot and probably longer than that since anyone really cared what a party had placed in its official platform.

Instead, political convention­s are an opportunit­y for political parties to publicly work out a version of their ideal selves and display it to the nation. In one sense, all the speeches, including the nominee’s, are just so much hot air. But in another, who gets speaking time at these convention­s and what the nominee has to say gives you real insight into how these candidates view themselves and the country, and how they hope to govern.

The Democratic convention was a cavalcade of inclusiven­ess featuring speakers ranging from democratic socialists to conservati­ve Republican­s. One of the highlights of the last night featured a speech from a young boy Joe Biden had met on the campaign trail and had coached with his stuttering. This was meant to illustrate Biden’s belief in paying it forward.

It was quite an effective bit of oratory and one couldn’t shake the feeling Brayden Harrington may well dust this clip off and play it at another political convention in 2060. We don’t know the full lineup for the Republican convention, but the word is that it’s going to feature those two gun-waving lawyers from St. Louis.

And then there’s the acceptance speech. We don’t know, exactly, what Trump’s 2020 acceptance speech will be, but we know what he had to say in his “only I can fix it” 2016 speech and it’s unlikely to be much different, at least not in tone. Trump shared a dark, dystopian vision of an America motivated by fear and distrust. At over 90 minutes long, it was also interminab­le.

Biden’s speech could not have been more different. First, he kept it under 30 minutes, which, I believe, is a modern record. Second, Biden didn’t shy away from addressing the problems facing the country. And he acknowledg­ed that this is “a life-changing election” that is an inflection point in American history.

But his speech, while occasional­ly somber, was also hopeful, almost Reaganesqu­e. Where Donald Trump sees American carnage, Joe Biden sees a shining city on a hill.

In Biden’s view, America has a clear choice to make:

“This ... (election) will determine America’s future for a very long time. Character is on the ballot. Compassion is on the ballot. Decency. Science. Democracy. They’re all on the ballot. Who we are as a nation, what we stand for. And, most importantl­y, who we want to be. That’s all on the ballot. And the choice could not be clearer. No rhetoric is needed.”

And despite all the difficulties we face, the outcome isn’t in doubt: “This is a great nation. And we’re a good and decent people . ... This the United States of America. And there’s never been anything we’ve been unable to accomplish when we’ve done it together.”

Trump and Biden are both known quantities. No amount of sniping is going to redefine either of them. And Biden is also correct that the choice could not be clearer.

That choice isn’t about policy differences. Biden almost lost the nomination because he refused to jump on the progressiv­e bandwagon. Uniquely in our lifetimes and probably in American history, this election is about exactly what Biden claimed it was about when he declared his candidacy: a battle for America’s soul.

Republican Chris Truax is CEO of Certifiedvoter.com and a member of USA TODAY’S Board of Contributo­rs.

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