Daily Nation Newspaper

Trump's shortcomin­gs make weak opponent Biden look strong

- By NICK BRYANT in New York

Biden’s bunker strategy has proved resistant to the Trump campaign’s bunker-busting bombs - the claims of senility, the charge he has become a cipher for the radical left, the false claim that defunding the police formed part of rapprochem­ent with Bernie Sanders.

MY

early take on Joe Biden was that the weaknesses that made it harder for him to secure the Democratic presidenti­al nomination would ultimately make it easier for him to win the presidency.

At a time when the Democratic Party was lurching leftwards, his pragmatic centrism would be advantageo­us because hard-hat voters in the Rust Belt and Starbucks moms in the swing state suburbs would find it unthreaten­ing. Nor was his inability to rouse a crowd necessaril­y a drawback.

Many Americans, after all, were yearning for a presidency they could have on in the background: soothing soft jazz after the round- the-clock heavy metal of the Trump years.

Biden's geniality was the key, his smile almost his philosophy. In a politics often driven by negative partisansh­ip - odium for your opponent more so than fervour for your own party's nominee - Biden would be hard to turn into a hate figure. Certainly, he was nowhere near as polarising as Hillary Clinton, whose negatives helped Trump pull off his unexpected victory in 2016.

Then I went to Iowa and New Hampshire and was shocked to see how the 77-year-old could barely hold a tune. Speeches became rambling soliloquie­s, a reminiscen­ce from his Senate career here, a name drop from his vice-presidenti­al tenure there. Looping and meandering, his train of thought regularly careered off the rails.

Anecdotes did not seem to make any political point; and while he spoke in vague generaliti­es about redeeming the soul of America, he never thrashed out what precisely that meant. Still he could flash his mega-wattage grin, but he appeared before us as an ambient presence who struggled to light up a room.

In 30 years of covering US politics, he was the most lacklustre front-runner I had seen, worse even than Jeb Bush in 2016. The former Florida governor could at least complete a cogent sentence, even if nobody applauded when it came to an end. After Biden's fourth place finish in the Iowa caucus and his fifth place showing in New Hampshire, many of us thought the time had come for him to don his trademark Aviator shades and ride off westward into the sunset.

Instead, of course, he headed to South Carolina, where the endorsemen­t of the influentia­l black Democratic congressma­n Jim Clyburn and the support of African Americans produced a Lazarus-like return from the dead.

Moderate rivals, such as Pete Buttigieg and Amy Klobuchar, left the race, coalescing around the establishm­ent candidate deemed to stand the best chance of fending off the insurgent challenge from Bernie Sanders.

Faced with the alarming prospect of a one-time socialist emerging as the party's nominee, they smashed the emergency glass in the hope that amiable Joe could put out the firebrand.

Days later, following his cascade of victories on Super Tuesday, some pundits marvelled at how Biden had triumphed in states where he had not even campaigned. But the opposite may well have been true. Biden might have performed well in places precisely because of his absence.

The lesson from Iowa and New Hampshire, after all, was that the more voters saw of him, the less they were likely to vote for him. His stealth candidacy ahead of Super Tuesday helped him wrap up the nomination.

The Covid lockdown, then, has been a boon to his candidacy. The months sequestere­d in the basement of his Delaware residence has provided a useful cloak of invisibili­ty.

Social distancing has even helped neutralise an issue that once imperiled his campaign: that he was inappropri­ately tactile with women, creepily touchy-feely.

More importantl­y, the

pandemic has taken the heat out of the ideologica­l battle within the Democratic Party. Biden has reached a unity accord with Bernie Sanders without granting too many concession­s to the left; one which stops short of promising universal healthcare and a Green New Deal, and avoids altogether polarising issues such as abolishing ICE (the Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agency), or decriminal­ising unauthoris­ed border crossings.

Biden will doubtless lose some progressiv­e support, especially amongst the young, but his campaign calculates this will be offset by attracting the backing of seniors and retirees, many of them one-time Trump supporters. Not only do the elderly vote at a higher rate than any other age group, they are also the demographi­c most vulnerable to Covid-19.

After the troubled start to his candidacy, it is as if the coronaviru­s has given Biden a political version of antibodies offering protection­s from his own underlying conditions.

His personal narrative also finds a mournful echo in these sorrowful times. Just after winning election to the Senate in 1972, he suffered the trauma of losing his first wife, Neilia, and 13-month- old daughter, Naomi, in a car accident.

Then in 2015 he watched his son, Beau, who had survived that car accident, die from a rare form of brain cancer. Biden is naturally empathetic. It puts him on the same emotional plain as many of the 140, 000 families who have recently suffered bereavemen­t as a result of Coronaviru­s.

So far, Biden's bunker strategy has proved resistant to the Trump campaign's bunker-busting bombs - the claims of senility, the charge he has become a cipher for the radical left, the false claim that defunding the police formed part of rapprochem­ent with Bernie Sanders. Instead, the focus has been on Donald Trump's imploding presidency.

Incumbency ordinarily bestows advantages. Since 1980, only one sitting president, George Herbert Walker Bush, has failed to win re-election.

Even during the post-war period from 1945 to 1980, when only one President, Dwight D. Eisenhower, successful­ly completed two full terms, voters ousted just two incumbents - Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter.

Donald Trump, however, has annulled the benefits of occupancy through his mishandlin­g of the pandemic.

The usual rule of thumb is that incumbency combined with a strong economy almost guarantees re-election - in 1992, Bush senior was primarily a victim of a recessiona­ry economy that failed to rebound by Election Day. But Covid-19, of course, has decimated the economy, causing the most serious economic shock since the Great Depression.

Voters who pointed to their soaring 401K retirement plans to rationalis­e their support for a president whose behaviour they often found distastefu­l, are shopping around. Many, the polls suggest, have already checked out.

Even some of his supposed loyalists, the non-college-educated white voters who comprise his base, are deserting him. Earlier in the year, he enjoyed a 31-point lead among this demographi­c, but recently that has slipped by 10 points.

Polling shows that an unexpected­ly high number of white voters disapprove of the president's handling of the racial protests following the alleged murder of George Floyd. They have not responded to Trump's tough law and order stance, which borrowed from Richard Nixon's winning presidenti­al campaign in 1968 that followed a long summer of racial turbulence. Maybe Trump has failed to appreciate a key difference between then and now. In 1968, Nixon was not the president.

Elections are often framed as a choice between continuity and change. Yet a selling point for Biden is that he offers voters a version of both. To the eight in 10 Americans who polling suggests believe the country is heading in the wrong direction, he is promising a course correction. Thus, he can plausibly present himself as a candidate of change.

But by pledging to serve as a convention­al president, returning to the norms of behaviour that Republican­s and Democratic incumbents have abided by for decades, he also represents a continuum. The repair of a chain in which Trump became the missing link.

Because of the false prophecies of 2016, pundits are understand­ably reluctant to make prediction­s, and to call time on a president with a double-digit deficit in most national polls and in some battlegrou­nd state surveys, too. The caution is well-advised.

As Biden ventures out more often from his basement redoubt, he will face closer scrutiny.

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The early primaries did not go well
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Joe Biden

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