Springfield News-Sun

In face of extremism, Biden is democracy’s candidate

- E.J. Dionne Jr. is a journalist, political commentato­r, and op-ed columnist for The Washington Post.

In placing democracy, political violence and right-wing extremism on the 2024 ballot, President Biden is playing jujitsu with Donald Trump, but also with Republican­s in Congress.

In a campaign speech near Valley Forge in Pennsylvan­ia on Friday, the president moved the election’s stakes above runof-the-mill politics to the very survival of democratic government. In doing so, he challenged voters — and the media — to see the alternativ­e to his reelection as capitulati­on to the darkest forces in American life and around the globe.

“We all know who Donald Trump is,” Biden declared in an address that repeatedly referred to George Washington, who rallied American Revolution­ary troops nearby. “The question we have to answer is: Who are we?”

Jujitsu uses the strength of an adversary against him. If Trump’s ability to dominate American political conversati­on has made it impossible for Biden to keep his promise of a more civil and peaceful politics, the president intends to make clear where the blame lies for the country’s distemper.

And if Trump’s radicaliza­tion of the Republican Party made Biden’s pledges of bipartisan­ship seem rooted in hollow dreams of yesteryear, the incumbent will argue that it is the likely GOP nominee who is forcing the country to choose between “solidarity and division,” between “possibilit­ies” and “carnage.”

But the president’s focus on democracy cannot be separated from the choices and potential crises a divided government in Washington confronts in the coming weeks.

There was good news Sunday that House and Senate leaders had struck a bipartisan agreement on overall 2024 government spending levels. But the deal, which is likely to face resistance from the GOP’S most extreme members, does not settle the battle over aid to Ukraine. House Speaker Mike Johnson (La.) and the Republican right are demanding draconian immigratio­n policies as the price for bolstering Ukraine.

Senate Republican­s and Democrats have been trying to secure a compromise on immigratio­n that would open the way for a bipartisan agreement to get assistance for Ukraine through.

Such an accord is necessary to get the required votes. But a conversati­on centered on democracy’s future at home and abroad has the potential to shift the debate’s spotlight back to where it belongs: Away from migrant issues that have paralyzed Congress for two decades and toward the “sacred cause” of democracy that Biden lifted up on Friday.

The question needs to be called: If House Republican­s kill assistance to Ukraine, they will hand a large victory to Vladimir Putin and disrupt the alliance of democracie­s that so far has helped Ukraine keep Russian troops at bay.

“We’ve got a Putin wing of the Republican Party that is eroding support for Ukraine and democracy,” said Rep. Ann Kuster (D-N.H.) in an interview. Will the Putin wing be allowed to win? Does Johnson want such a “victory” to be his first major achievemen­t as speaker?

Biden’s case is against not only the man himself, but also an extremism that Trump has cultivated. In his Pennsylvan­ia speech, Biden spoke about book bans and noted how remarkable it was for a candidate even to have to mention the issue. He denounced the power of “politics, fear (and) money” and those who “abandoned the truth and abandoned our democracy.”

Extremism was a potent issue that divided Republican­s in the past, especially in the early 1960s, with the rise of the John Birch Society, the Minutemen and other right-wing groups. It poses a challenge to Republican­s now, especially in suburban, middle-class enclaves.

A senior Biden adviser who briefed journalist­s before the speech noted that “political violence is on display in a way that really unsettles the country.” Encouragin­g an extremism of deed as well as word is part of Trump’s political legacy. Calling it out will be central to the next 10 months.

“When there’s an extremist threat in the country,” the aide said, “you have to name it, you have to say what it is.”

 ?? E.J. Dionne Jr. ??
E.J. Dionne Jr.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States