Chattanooga Times Free Press

BIDEN’S PROBLEM? HE DOESN’T HATE REPUBLICAN­S

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WASHINGTON — Let’s get this straight: Joe Biden is leading in the polls for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination because he’s the most “electable” candidate in the Democratic field? A guy who doesn’t realize that “I worked with segregatio­nists” isn’t a winning message with Democrats in 2020?

This is what you get when you turn to a candidate who has been in Washington for 46 years. Biden was first elected to the Senate in 1972, when the Democratic Party was very different than it is today. As a freshman senator, he had to get along with the senior leadership of his party — which included segregatio­nists James Eastland of Mississipp­i and Herman Talmadge of Georgia.

You may be thinking: Who in the world are James Eastland and Herman Talmadge? You’re not alone. About 99.9% of living Americans had either forgotten their names or never heard of them in the first place, until Biden decided to dredge them up from the fever swamps of the Democratic Party’s sordid racial past.

Why, you ask, would he do such a thing? Because that’s what Joe Biden does. He is a walking, talking gaffe machine. His point didn’t even make sense. He was trying to argue that he can work across the aisle with people with whom he fundamenta­lly disagrees. But Eastland and Talmadge sat on the same side of the aisle as Biden in the Senate; they were Democrats.

So now his younger, less popular Democratic opponents are pouncing on Biden’s mistake. California Sen. Kamala Harris (averaging 7.1% in the polls) declared that for Biden “to coddle the reputation­s of segregatio­nists, of people who if they had their way I would literally not be standing here as a member of the United States Senate, is, I think, it’s just misinforme­d and it’s wrong.” New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker (2.3%) declared, “Vice President Biden’s relationsh­ips with proud segregatio­nists are not the model for how we make America a safer and more inclusive place for black people, and for everyone.”

Give me a break. No reasonable person thinks that Biden was defending or even sympatheti­c to segregatio­n. What Biden was trying to do — in his own, Bideny way — was to defend not segregatio­n but civility and compromise. But sadly, in today’s Democratic Party, those ideas are just as controvers­ial.

Recall that in February, Biden was forced to apologize for declaring — brace yourself — that Vice President Pence was a “decent guy.” Then, a few months later, Biden had to backtrack on his effort to craft a middle-ground approach to climate change that would be embraced by both environmen­talists and blue-collar voters. After Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont thundered, “There is no ‘middle ground’ when it comes to climate policy,” Biden soon embraced the Green New Deal.

And this month, Biden was forced to flip-flop and abandon his four-decadelong support for the Hyde amendment — bipartisan legislatio­n that bars public funding for abortions — after his Democratic opponents attacked him for reaffirmin­g what he once proudly called his “middle-of-the-road” policy on abortion.

In today’s Democratic Party, “compromise” and “consensus” are dirty words. Biden’s problem is not that he is a closet racist; it’s that he does not hate Republican­s and other political opponents. As he put it on Tuesday, “Today, you look at the other side and you’re the enemy. Not the opposition, the enemy. We don’t talk to each other anymore.” That is the point he was trying to make in his ham-handed way. And that is what his Democratic opponents are really upset about.

In a January speech, Biden said, “I read in The New York Times today that one of my problems if I were to run for president, I like Republican­s. Okay, well, bless me, Father, for I have sinned.” Apparently, for many on the left, that sin is unforgivab­le.

 ??  ?? Marc Thiessen
Marc Thiessen

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