The Morning Call

Don’t like Joe’s gaffes? Consider alternativ­es

- Clarence Page

OK, we saw this coming, didn’t we?

Former Vice President Joe Biden, who has a well-known history of gaffes, spouted another one Thursday night by telling a group of mostly minority voters in Iowa that “poor kids” are just as bright as “white kids.”

That’s awkward. But let us not even try to pretend a moral equivalenc­e between Biden’s racial gaffes and the verbal assaults against minority lawmakers that President Donald Trump has committed.

Biden’s latest blooper occurred while he was speaking off the cuff — always a risky propositio­n for the talkative Joe — on the issue of education at a town hall in Des Moines hosted by the Asian and Latino Coalition. “We should challenge students in these schools that have advanced placement programs in these schools,” he says on a video clip from the event. “We have this notion that somehow if you’re poor, you cannot do it. Poor kids are just as bright and just as talented as white kids.”

He paused there for a moment, perhaps to play back in his mind whether he had just said what he meant to say. Some audience members broke into applause, indicating they heard what he meant to say. Over the applause, he added, “Wealthy kids, black kids, Asian kids, no I really mean it, but think how we think about it.”

Of course, a lot of people soon were thinking about what Biden was thinking and what he said about it.

The misfortune of Biden’s latest blooper is in its reminder of questions that have dogged his candidacy. Is the 76-year-old still sharp enough to handle the presidency or even his own campaign?

Who, for example, could forget the gaffe that sunk his second presidenti­al campaign? On the day in February 2007 when he launched that effort, the then-senator from Delaware found himself defending comments he’d made a week earlier about his rival contender, then-Sen. Barack Obama from Illinois.

Biden intended to compliment Obama in an interview with the New York Observer when he described him as “the first mainstream African American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy.”

That remark ignited a hailstorm of comments and commentary, including some from black writers, including me, to explain why, among other sensitivit­ies, the adjective “articulate” irritates many African Americans with its implicatio­n that, for us, speaking English well must be a monumental feat.

Obama did a lot to redeem Biden’s reputation. This time I hope Biden doesn’t abruptly drop out as a result of this gaffe, as he did in 2007. At this time of heightened national tensions, some of them stirred up by the president’s base-focused campaign, Americans in both parties need to talk more about where this country is going on race and other identity issues, not less.

And, of course, President Donald Trump has done a lot to lower the bar of decency that used to doom the campaigns of candidates who offended women and minorities, intentiona­lly or not, and he has had many defenders.

On Thursday, for example, a reporter for the conservati­ve Breitbart news site accused Biden of misquoting Trump’s infamous descriptio­n of the white supremacis­ts at the 2017 Charlottes­ville, Virginia, clash between racist and anti-racist groups as “very fine people.”

Breitbart picked up on a right-wing talking point that notes Trump’s condemnati­on of the supremacis­ts elsewhere in his remarks — although not as vigorously, in my view, as his declaratio­n that there were “very fine people on both sides.” I tend to side with Biden after having seen Trump’s remarks in context. Trump’s condemnati­on of neo-Nazis and anti-racists argues for a moral equivalenc­e between both sides that, on that day of all days, was not deserved by the side that had the white supremacis­ts.

Voters should now have the opportunit­y to judge Biden and other contenders not just for what they say but also for what they say they really mean.

Tribune Content Agency

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