The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

If voters don’t want Biden or Trump, the system is broken

- Jonah Goldberg Jonah Goldberg is editor-inchief of The Dispatch and the host of The Remnant podcast. His Twitter handle is @JonahDispa­tch.

America’s decision tree has gone horribly awry.

The Constituti­on doesn’t mention political parties, but the Constituti­on and the two-party system rest on a central Madisonian idea: make politics safer and more boring. Madison wouldn’t put it that way, though John Adams might.

Both our formal and informal political decision-making processes are designed to force a lot of debate and contemplat­ion, to secure buy-in from diverse coalitions of interests and stakeholde­rs.

One reason for constituti­onal checks-and-balances is to make sure that momentary popular passions don’t overpower reason with demagoguer­y.

The parties, meanwhile, are supposed to pick candidates who are the least objectiona­ble to the broadest array of interests within the party coalition.

Even the primaries — which I loathe — were intended to give geographic­ally diverse voters a chance to see if a candidate has the temperamen­t and character to be president.

They’re also supposed to give the press and other institutio­ns an opportunit­y to vet candidates before they get the nomination.

None of that is happening. Let’s start with the Republican front-runner.

A majority of Americans think Donald Trump — a twiceimpea­ched former one-term president — should be criminally prosecuted for trying to steal the 2020 election and fomenting a riot at the U.S. Capitol.

Already under indictment in New York in a fraud case, with more serious indictment­s likely, Trump also was this week found liable for sexually abusing a columnist in 1996. In that case, Trump repeated under oath that he couldn’t have raped E. Jean Carroll because “she is not my type.”

As for preventing popular passions from overpoweri­ng decisionma­king, Trump is now openly runnin

He has rhetorical­ly embraced the worst actors during the Jan. 6, 2021, assault on the Capitol, promising pardons and an official apology for everyone. Recently, he literally embraced — i.e., hugged — a convicted rioter who says that anyone who helped certify Joe Biden as president should be executed for treason.

As for vetting a candidate’s character and temperamen­t, partisans now only care about that as a weapon against the other team.

A primary reason Republican­s have been rallying to Trump is that they believe he’s being treated unfairly by the system.

Trump, who has admitted to being “the most fabulous whiner,” leans into this dysfunctio­nal rationale constantly. He recently repeated the claim he’s been treated worse than Abraham Lincoln, who, you may recall, was assassinat­ed. Put aside the contestabl­e claim that Trump is being treated unfairly, how is being picked on a qualificat­ion for being president?

Then there’s Joe Biden, who turned 80 last November. His approval rating in a Washington Post-ABC poll is at a devastatin­g new low: 36%.

Most Democratic voters do not want him to be president again.

Nearly two-thirds of Americans think he does not have the “mental sharpness” or “physical health” to be effective. And, he’s losing in a match-up against Trump.

But, so far, his only competitio­n for the nomination is Robert F. Kennedy Jr., an anti-vaccine gadfly, and Marianne Williamson, a self-described “spiritual guide.”

Biden’s legal and ethical lapses may pale in comparison to Trump’s, but they’re not trivial.

His son, Hunter, is clearly a deeply troubled man who, along with the president’s brother, has traded on the family name to rake in millions from Ukrainian and Chinese interests.

Joe Biden denies any wrongdoing and any knowledge of wrongdoing, but only people inside the Democratic bubble think none of this is a political problem for a candidate who struggles to maintain composure — or recall details — when his, or his family’s, integrity is questioned.

Biden may be OK for 80, but he’s still one fall or one recession away from an implosion in public confidence.

In short, we are on track to have a presidenti­al contest between a whiny, disgraced, septuagena­rian, charactero­logically unfit former president and an octogenari­an incumbent who a majority of Americans believe is not mentally sharp enough for the job.

Each has an incentive to run against the other because their best shot at winning is having the other as an opponent.

As someone who thinks it would be truly dangerous to put Trump back in power, I think it’s truly irresponsi­ble to run Biden against him.

There’s still time to avert a no-win scenario, but that would require party leaders to lead.

If these two old men end up being the nominees, the party hacks will insist it’s a “binary choice,” as if that excuses their role in putting us in such a calamitous predicamen­t in the first place.

It’s not supposed to be like this.

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