Yuma Sun

Biden faces a tricky vice president choice

- BY CARL GOLDEN Copyright 2020, distribute­d exclusivel­y by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate. Carl Golden is a senior contributi­ng analyst with the William J. Hughes Center for Public Policy at Stockton University in New Jersey. You can reach him at cgold

While Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden remains semicloist­ered in the bunker/ basement/television studio of his Wilmington, Del., home, the vice presidenti­al selection process plods on.

Biden’s campaign is facing increasing pressure from the party’s progressiv­e wing to choose a running mate who supports massive reductions in spending on police department­s and major revisions in law enforcemen­t powers. By pledging to select a woman as his running mate, Biden availed himself of several highly qualified women capable of fulfilling his principal condition — ready to step in as president should it become necessary.

Protest gatherings, marches and violence erupted across the country after the death of an unarmed black man at the hands of a Minneapoli­s police officer gave rise to demands to “Defund the Police” and propelled support for the selection of an African-American woman as Biden’s running mate.

Biden’s campaign quickly recognized the perils of the “Defund the Police” movement and distanced the former vice president with a declaratio­n of opposition. But President Trump’s campaign, sensing a potentiall­y powerful wedge issue which could be exploited, piled on. It moved quickly to hang the movement around Biden’s neck as evidence the Democratic Party had ceded control to its radical elements who supported abolishing police department­s.

A recent Harris/HillX poll bore out the Trump view — 52 percent of Democrats supported defunding while 78 percent of Republican­s and 70 percent of independen­ts opposed it.

Trump ratcheted up the attack with his usual volatile and incendiary rhetoric. He proclaimed himself the “president of law and order,” threatened to turn dogs loose on protesters, shoot looters and mused aloud about mobilizing the U.S. military to quell demonstrat­ions.

At a time when the country sought leadership to address the protestors’ legitimate grievances and work with Congress to develop policies to resolve them, Trump chose to lead the country into war.

The lawbreakin­g chaos — attacks on police, burning businesses, looting in a party atmosphere — demanded a law enforcemen­t response and, in most cases, received one. Scores of arrests were made and curfews enforced. The demonstrat­ions that followed, while raucous and noisy, were generally peaceful.

Meaningful reforms in policing procedures and practices — a position Biden has embraced — enjoys healthy majority support, but withdrawin­g traditiona­l law enforcemen­t functions does not.

Proponents of the “Defund the Police” movement struggled to explain their goal is re-allocating funds spent on policing to social service programs to help individual­s whose behavior is better served by profession­als in the field of mental health, for instance, than by encounters with police officers not trained to deal with such confrontat­ions.

They’ve been victimized by their sloganeeri­ng, as critics quickly framed the debate over police or no police. Nor has their cause been helped by inflammato­ry anti-police remarks against a background of violent street clashes, arson, looting, and destructio­n of property.

Many progressiv­es are already suspicious of Biden and, as he deals with the increase in support for an African-American vice presidenti­al selection, he’s treading on tricky terrain.

Two potential running mates under serious considerat­ion — California Sen. Kamala Harris and Florida Congresswo­man Val Demings — drew opposition from some outspoken Black leaders because, they contended, their earlier careers in law enforcemen­t (Harris as a prosecutor and Demings as a chief of police) disqualifi­ed them. Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar took herself out of the running, realizing her service as a county prosecutor worked against her.

If Biden passes on Harris or Demings, he’ll be accused of caving in to the militant progressiv­es. Should he choose either one, he’ll encounter significan­t backlash, continued criticism and possible loss of support from that wing.

It’s another straw on the camel’s back as the party struggles to construct a united front for the fourmonth run to the election.

Party establishm­ent figures are unhappy and concerned over what they perceive is a shortage of enthusiasm on the part of Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, among others, and are privately furious over primary election challenges backed by progressiv­es to incumbent members of Congress.

Biden has surged to a double-digit lead in several polls but concerns persist it is a lead on paper only, that Trump — buoyed by an enthusiast­ic rock solid base — is capable of making up ground in significan­t chunks while Democrats squabble among themselves and worry about whether large disgruntle­d segments of their party will desert it.

His choice of a running mate may hold the answer.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States