Las Vegas Review-Journal

Age is where similariti­es end with Trump, Biden

- E.J. Dionne E.J. Dionne is a columnist for The Washington Post.

The most convenient political habit of the moment is to natter on about how both President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump are unpopular and old, and how Americans long for some new and energetic candidate (identity to be disclosed later).

This above-the-battle, “woe is us” posture makes those who adopt it look tough-minded, independen­t and clear-eyed. It puts Biden and Trump on the same level and then compares both with someone who doesn’t yet exist. Never mind that it’s far easier to imagine the perfect candidate than to find one.

This might be harmless if Biden and Trump really were equivalent, but nothing could be further from the truth.

It’s time for everyone, the media especially, to face up to the actual choice: Between constituti­onal democracy and authoritar­ianism. Between a normal human being and a self-involved, spiteful madman. Between a government that has performed well and a regime that would gyrate from one personal obsession to another.

News over the past few days provides another contrast: between a president seeking compromise to protect our southern border, while also getting help to Ukraine, and an opponent who claims (with little evidence) that terrorists and drug dealers are rushing into the country — and who wants them to keep coming so he can win an election.

False equivalenc­e is the bane of our politics, and it’s a particular problem for (I hate these terms) “legacy” or “mainstream” media. At its best, the old media — which I have been part of my entire career — takes on the essential work of informing the public about what is going on in the world with a sense of fairness and a dedication to truth, as best as it can be determined.

Journalist­s should never give up on this. But decades of attacks from the political right have made the mainstream media far more sensitive to the appearance of liberal bias than to worries about other forms of distortion. This makes formulas of false equivalenc­e very attractive — statements along the lines of “Both sides are equally bad” or “What this person did is terrible, but notice this (far less egregious) act by the other guy.”

The Trump movement has played on the mainstream media’s, well, liberal guilt ever since its champion came down that escalator.

Reporters were told to take Trump “seriously, not literally.” No, we should do both. They were said to lack understand­ing of the people who were voting for him. There’s some truth here — the media does have a class bias — but understand­ing what might motivate a group of voters should not mean glorifying them, whether they support Trump or anyone else. It should certainly not preclude clarity about the difference between a politician who stokes and exploits their anger, and another who is trying to solve their problems.

Above all, it should not mean pretending that Trump and his opponents (whether that’s Biden, Hillary Clinton or Nikki Haley) live in the same moral universe as he does and are as flawed as he is.

The age issue has a lovely objectivit­y about it because Biden is 81. And voters’ unhappines­s with the choice between Biden and Trump has real polling data to support it. I get why Haley says Trump and Biden are “equally bad” and too old. After all, she’s running against them both and wants to pry voters in her party away from their Trump habit. Putting Biden and Trump on the same level might be a way to GOP hearts.

But the fact that they are not “equally bad” was brought home on the night of the New Hampshire primary, when Trump went on an unhinged tirade against Haley. He was petty (“I watched her in the fancy dress that probably wasn’t so fancy”), threatenin­g (“I don’t get too angry,” he said angrily, “I get even”) and vindictive (“She’s not going to win, but if she did, she would be under investigat­ion”). Haley knows it’s absurd to pretend that Biden is capable of such an indecent display.

And on that age issue, it’s another sign of media skittishne­ss that the 77-year-old Trump’s frequent miscues and flights from reality did not get much coverage until Republican Haley called out the speech in which he kept confusing “Nikki Haley” with “Nancy Pelosi.” Yes, strong women seem to drive him batty, but it should not have taken Haley to force a reckoning with Trump’s disassocia­tion problems.

There’s no question Biden has a lot of work to do, particular­ly to motivate younger voters whose support he needs and who would prefer someone new and dynamic. But the fact that no Democrat of consequenc­e chose to challenge Biden suggests he just might have the qualities required in this dangerous year: his character, his desire to hold the country together and his ability to keep the peace in his party. There could not be a sharper contrast with Trump.

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY / ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE (2020) ?? Then-president Donald Trump, left, and Joe Biden take part in a presidenti­al debate Oct. 22, 2020, at Belmont University in Nashville, Tenn. Biden, now president at age 81, and Trump, who will be 78 in June, are their respective parties’ front-runners for the presidenti­al nomination again this year, setting up a rematch of the 2020 election.
PATRICK SEMANSKY / ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE (2020) Then-president Donald Trump, left, and Joe Biden take part in a presidenti­al debate Oct. 22, 2020, at Belmont University in Nashville, Tenn. Biden, now president at age 81, and Trump, who will be 78 in June, are their respective parties’ front-runners for the presidenti­al nomination again this year, setting up a rematch of the 2020 election.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States