The Mercury News

MitchMcCon­nell is hardly a ‘friend’ to the president

- By Charles Blow Charles Blow is a New York Times columnist.

I don’t know Joe Biden personally. I’ve never met the man.

However, I assume that he is a good and decent person. And I can certainly appreciate the fact that he and the Democrats were the only thing standing between us and the reelection of Donald Trump in 2020, an event that could well have heralded the desolation of the country, just as they are the only guard preventing Trump’s Republican Party from retaking Congress in the midterms and the White House in 2024.

In a two-party system in which one party has gone completely off the rails, Biden and the Democrats are the only option, the only chance for normalcy, sanity and truth. They are the only hope democracy has in this country.

And yet Biden keeps saying and doing things that are absolutely infuriatin­g — not to mention alienating.

Last week at the National Prayer Breakfast, Biden said this of the Senate minority leader, Mitch McConnell:

“Mitch, I don’t want to hurt your reputation, but we really are friends. And that is not an epiphany we’re having here at the moment. We’ve always — you’ve always done exactly what you’ve said. You’re a man of word — of your word, and you’re a man of honor. Thank you for being my friend.” Really? McConnell is a man of his word who’s always done exactly what he’s said? Are you kidding me?!

In 2013, when Harry Reid and Democrats eliminated the filibuster on most presidenti­al appointmen­ts — but not Supreme Court picks — McConnell slammed the move as “a sad day in the history of the Senate” and a Democratic power grab.

But then when Trump was elected and nominated Neil Gorsuch, McConnell led Republican­s to eliminate the filibuster for Supreme Court justice nominees. This allowed Trump to push through three justices, one accused of sexual assault.

The last of those justices, Amy Coney Barrett, was confirmed to the court on a near party-line vote less than 10 days before a presidenti­al election, even though when President Barack Obama nominated Merrick Garland months before an election, McConnell wouldn’t even hold a vote on the nomination.

This has all led to a conservati­ve Supreme Court that is not only threatenin­g Roe v. Wade but is now also threatenin­g affirmativ­e action.

At the same time, McConnell has led his party to block voting-rights legislatio­n as racialized voter-suppressio­n bills sweep the country.

So, how can Biden maintain that McConnell is an honest, honorable friend?

It seems that Biden suffers from the same blind spot as other white liberal leaders throughout history: looking past the oppressive impulses of other white men to see kinship and commonalit­y. Where the oppressed see an existentia­l threat, men like Biden only seem to see a disagreeme­nt among decent men on a political issue. They see them as simply on the “other side” rather than “other than.”

It is akin to Abraham Lincoln trying to appeal to Southern slavers in his first inaugural address, saying, “We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained, it must not break our bonds of affection.”

Earlier in that address Lincoln had thrown the slavers a bone by defending the fugitive slave laws, for which Frederick Douglass blasted him as an “excellent slave hound.”

This version of politics is an extension of the Looney Tunes cartoon of Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog, where they are enemies on the clock but are friends off the clock, and is offensive to the people whose very lives are at stake.

When it comes to the issue of power and politics, the Bidens and McConnells of the world maintain their own affinity group.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell attends a news conference Feb. 1 on Capitol Hill in Washington.
JACQUELYN MARTIN — ASSOCIATED PRESS Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell attends a news conference Feb. 1 on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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