Mail & Guardian

Hillary’s haters must suck it up now that Biden’s bowed out

- Megan Carpentier

Joe Biden is officially not running for United States president — for real this time. He didn’t exactly drop out of the race — it’s hard to “drop out” of a race you’ve been watching from the sidelines — but, given the persistent rampant speculatio­n that, at any moment, he would launch his third presidenti­al campaign and snatch the Democratic nomination from Hillary Clinton, it seems like he ended something.

Still, it wasn’t like a nation’s hopes and dreams were resting on his shoulders.

The distance between Biden and Clinton on policy issues is so narrow that they’d be forcibly separated by chaperones at a high school prom. And in a campaign in which Clinton has pushed women’s issues to the fore, Biden would have had some uncomforta­ble questions to answer about, among other things, his treatment of Anita Hill during US Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas’s confirmati­on hearings.

And though lectern manufactur­ers (no, it’s not a podium) may take a hit now that debate hosts don’t have to keep one warm for him, the only people who are really crying today are those people who hated the thought of “having” to vote for Hillary Clinton.

To those people, I can only say: it’s time to suck it up. The latest polling had her up by at least 20 points over every other candidate in the race with Biden in it; the narrowest recent poll shows that, with Biden out, her lead over Bernie Sanders among Democratic primary voters goes to 25 points.

Plus, despite the convention­al wisdom that Donald Trump can’t possibly win the Republican nomination, he’s been atop the GOP leaderboar­d for 100 straight days. The first post-debate CNN/ORD poll shows Clinton leading over Trump outside the margin of error and, though her unfavourab­les aren’t great, they’re trumped by Trump’s.

Clinton’s Achilles heel has always been her supposed divisivene­ss, but she may well end up facing a Republican next November whose entire political strategy is to divide Americans into people cheering his supposed truthtelli­ng about Mexicans and Muslims and Megyn Kelly menstruati­ng, and the great silent majority of

people who think that he’s wrong, offensive and would be a terrible president.

Trump is almost certainly not the person to be answering a 3am phone call, as Clinton asked voters to contemplat­e in 2008; on a bad day, he’s not even a person most of us would trust with our Twitter password and the retweet button.

But, again, he’s the ongoing Republican frontrunne­r — which, one assumes, is why the “scoop” that Biden was going to declare his candidacy went to Fox News and not the New York Times.

Nobody wanted an alternativ­e (and one known to run mediocre campaigns) to the Clinton juggernaut more than conservati­ves.

With Biden out of the race, Republican­s face the horrifying possibilit­y that Clinton and Sanders will run positive — even frightenin­gly adult — primary campaigns, highlighti­ng their difference­s in ways that play to their respective strengths before Sanders bows to what may become the inevitable electoral odds in Clinton’s favour. And all this would happen while Republican­s continue to snipe at one another and Trump continues to be Trumpish.

Biden’s withdrawal from the race gives his base of supporters two choices: throw support behind Clinton (the polls suggest they will) or try to “feel the Bern”. With the Republican Party drifting further right into sideshow territory, it’s hard to see which, if any, of the GOP candidates can capture the near-mythical Reagan Democrats who might have been Biden’s base after a Republican primary season in which popularity is a function of candidate’s willingnes­s to be the biggest jerk.

In a sense, the height of the prowoman legacy Biden has carefully nurtured might be refusing to run. By doing so, he may have helped secure the US’s first female president. — © Guardian News & Media 2015

 ?? Photo: Mark Wilson/Getty ?? No, thanks: Joe Biden will not be running for US president.
Photo: Mark Wilson/Getty No, thanks: Joe Biden will not be running for US president.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa