Antelope Valley Press

Unlike in 2020 election, Biden will never be normal again

- Rich Lowry Rich Lowry is the editor-in-chief of National Review. Commentary

Joe Biden won the normality test in 2020. There wasn’t anything remarkable about him. He just seemed like a steady hand who had been around for a while, who didn’t look or sound like a radical, and who knew how Washington worked.

He wasn’t the leader of a movement, wasn’t charismati­c and wasn’t particular­ly witty or well-spoken. He was, in fact, completely uninterest­ing and utterly convention­al. He was just the most normal guy in the room.

He benefited from a favorable contrast with the magnetic, endlessly interestin­g, constantly outrageous, norm-busting President Donald Trump, whose theatrical and chaotic governance made him vulnerable to a basement campaign run by a candidate happy, in ice-cream terms, to be vanilla to Trump’s rocky road.

If Democrats hope to rerun the 2020 campaign, they will once again have plenty of material to work with against Trump, who provides more of it on a regular basis. It’s the other side of the equation that’s the problem — the supposed safe alternativ­e is AWOL and never coming back.

That erstwhile Joe Biden, the generic, broadly acceptable president, didn’t survive contact with the reality of his presidency.

Of course, he destroyed his reputation as the steady hand with his disastrous mishandlin­g of Afghanista­n. It’s not just that he kneecapped our allies and abandoned Americans — all accompanie­d by Fall of Saigon—like images of chaos and desperatio­n on the ground — but that he insisted everything was fine.

After this, it was impossible to look at Biden the same, and indeed his approval rating has never recovered.

Maybe you could say that he was dealt a bad hand in Afghanista­n, or, after 20 years, the interventi­on had to end one way or the other.

The border, however, is even more damning. Biden took a situation that was under control, blew it up, refused to readjust when the consequenc­es became obvious, insisted that the crisis wasn’t a crisis as it began to be felt all over the country, and engaged in implausibl­e blame-shifting — all because he was beholden to a new, radical ideology hostile to borders as such.

This wasn’t moderate or competent. And it certainly wasn’t normal.

Even if Biden’s record were unassailab­le, the way he walks and speaks now would make it impossible for him to be a nothing-to-see-here convention­al politician again.

We have never in the modern media age witnessed a president this infirm. It is not what anyone expects from the president of the United States, a role associated with vigor, energy and very often youth.

Watching Biden mumble through speeches, get confused about his stage directions, mix up names and old memories, and walk so stiffly and awkwardly that he seems at risk of stumbling or falling at any time is deeply unsettling.

A president is supposed to reassure the public with his bearing and words; Biden now largely does the opposite.

For most people, he doesn’t even meet the most basic standard of seeming capable of performing his duties for the entirety of his term in office if he’s reelected. Indeed, that Biden will serve as president until January 2029 may be among the most prepostero­us things a major political party has ever asked the American public to believe.

Democrats will take comfort from the president’s fiery State of the Union performanc­e, but Biden shouting his way through an extensivel­y rehearsed speech on a teleprompt­er didn’t make him seem any younger and won’t allay the well-founded concerns about his age.

In the latest New York Times poll, 71% of people agree strongly or somewhat that Biden is “just too old to be president.” This is unpreceden­ted territory, and is politicall­y perilous when you hope to be the default candidate arrayed against an unacceptab­le alternativ­e.

Donald Trump, who in so many ways is an outlier in American politics, is now matched up against another outlier. The normality advantage that Biden enjoyed in 2020 is gone, and defeating his Republican adversary has, accordingl­y, gotten that much more difficult.

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