Times-Call (Longmont)

Why Gov. Jared Polis could answer Democrats’ 2024 prayers

- George Will’s email address is georgewill@washpost.com

BOULDER, Colo. — President Joe Biden is sensibly saying what he cannot sensibly mean.

By vowing to run again, he delays becoming diminished as yesterday’s news. And he delays the distractio­n of Democrats searching for his successor. That search is, however, imperative.

The national consequenc­es of progressiv­ism — inflation, crime, education as indoctrina­tion, etc. — are dismaying, and it is too late to undo Biden’s embrace of the agenda of progressiv­es who have never warmly embraced him. Furthermor­e, many millions of voters have come to this adverse conclusion about him: The apogee of his career has not coincided with the peak of his personal abilities.

It is fanciful for Democrats to think a recent success in Congress (they call it “climate legislatio­n”; 2% of Americans tell Gallup that climate is their foremost concern) will resonate two years hence, or that then voters will re-endorse an unsteady president who will be 86 in 2028.

Neither party can responsibl­y participat­e in presenting the nation in 2024 with a spiritcrus­hing Biden-trump 2.0. The Democrats’ dilemma is especially difficult because Biden’s vice president is an incontinen­t producer of word salads who suffers from deficits of political talent and policy substance.

It is, therefore, time for public discussion of Democrats who are plausible presidents. The nation could do worse than to start here.

Colorado’s Gov. Jared Polis is artistic in his rhetorical avoidance of presidenti­al politics: The mere mention of it produces a Jackson Pollock-style splatter of verbiage about how he thinks, and presumably dreams, always and only about Colorado.

However, if he is reelected in November, his personal fortune might be put in the service of his impressive political talents and ambitions. If so, a national audience can assess his knack for leavening his high-octane progressiv­ism with departures from that church’s strict catechism.

Although his parents were, he says, 1960s hippies, he chose to make a mint from capitalism rather than overthrowi­ng it.

After sailing through high school in three years, at 17 he arrived at Princeton, where, as a sophomore, he and two friends founded an internet-access company.

He founded two other internet-related companies, sold all three for more than $1 billion, and used some of this to found — heresy alert — two charter schools. This sin against progressiv­ism was perhaps forgivable because the schools’ primary purpose was to help children of immigrants.

Elected to Congress in 2008, Polis was the first same-sex parent in the House (he and his husband have two children), and 10 years later became the United States’ first openly gay man elected governor. In Congress, his endorsemen­t of the conclusion­s of the Simpsonbow­les deficit reduction commission about the need for entitlemen­t reforms proved his understand­ing of arithmetic. His endorsemen­t was not risky because electoral arithmetic guaranteed that Congress would avoid doing something risky by doing nothing.

As governor, he has delivered all-day kindergart­en, and has promised Colorado’s complete reliance on renewable energy by 2040. (He will be long gone before that promise goes unfulfille­d.) But he, like 79% of Colorado voters, opposed a ballot initiate to create a staterun universal health-care system that Colorado, like 49 other states, cannot afford. And he has implemente­d a robust public school choice program: Every child is guaranteed a place in a neighborho­od school but can attend any school in the state. Almost 14% of the state’s pupils (22.4% in Denver) are in charter schools, which doubly serve the public interest — by performing well and annoying teachers unions. Polis eschews progressiv­ism’s protection­ism: Biden should, he says, have ended Donald Trump’s tariffs “on day one.”

The Democratic Party’s leftward lurch has made it, as Daniel Mccarthy writes in the Spectator, less the party of the New Deal than the party of new genders. Perhaps we are learning the impossibil­ity of having just one party become weird.

One party has become militantly absurd, finding proof of sophistica­ted 2020 electoral skuldugger­y in the villains’ ability to completely conceal all evidence of their villainy.

The other party, foolishly convinced that derangemen­t puts success beyond the reach of a political party, feels free to promulgate its own absurditie­s, amounting to “1619 = 1776” and “Do not defund the pronoun police.”

Polis resides here, his birthplace, a short drive from Denver, in a university town so woke it makes Madison, Wisconsin, and Ann Arbor, Michigan, seem Confederat­e. Neverthele­ss, when Democrats seek a progressiv­e who is palatable to nonbelieve­rs, they might look here.

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