Debate Debacle: Biden Should Withdraw

Watching the debate, I thought that if I were a blank slate, without background knowledge and understanding, I’d vote for Trump. Tragically, that does largely characterize too many voters.

The Biden team wanted this debate. Cockily threw down the gauntlet. What were they thinking?

I forced myself to watch, dreading a train-wreck. Because of what I’ve written about as the power imbalance between good and evil. Good people are constrained by ethics and scruples, bad people are not. So unlike Biden, Trump could say anything. Anything.

Enabled by the debate rules, barring the moderators from fact checking. The Biden team agreed to this. What were they thinking?

That Biden himself would counter every Trump lie? Mission impossible, which not even Superman could accomplish. While Biden proved himself no superman.

And so Trump spun out a whole absurdist alternate reality, practically unchallenged. Not until near midnight did CNN’s fact checker roll out the long list of lies. In that department, Trump outdid himself (however seemingly improbable). Like, on January 6, he’d offered Speaker Pelosi 10,000 troops to secure the Capitol, and she refused? And later she took responsibility for the mayhem? You couldn’t make this stuff up. (Well, Trump could.)

Meantime, the Biden-prescribed debate rules also kept Trump from being his own worst enemy, preventing him from running derangedly at the mouth. So he almost seemed coherent and not a sick harpy. But especially disgraceful in the debate was the near-invisibility of the truth about January 6 and Trump’s coup attempt. The damning words “fake electors” were never heard. Nor was Trump quoted saying he’d be a dictator on Day One.

But Trump was not even the main story. Biden was. Within minutes of the opening, it was game over. I won’t reprise what you’ve already been hearing ad nauseam. But this may actually have been helpfully clarifying. Despite some leading Democrats and Biden himself valiantly trying to stand fast, there’s no denying what we saw on that debate stage.

“There is a tide in the affairs of men,” Shakespeare wrote. So it might seem in contemporary America. The 2020 election, and the immediate reaction to January 6 may have been fleeting intermissions, with the dominant tide afterward powerfully recrudescing, as Trump, for all his crimes, went from strength to strength, like some irresistible force. And it’s an irony that Trump’s debate shtick was so full of talk about American decline— when he himself is an avatar of national moral and civic collapse.

A tragic view of life recognizes the salience of loss, with death its ultimate embodiment. America, for a quarter millennium, represented an idealistic defiance of that. Now the implacable dark tide may at last be engulfing us. This debate debacle another almost preternaturally extreme manifestation.

Previously, my estimate of Trump’s winning odds had been rising, from about 50-50 to 75%, given that not even felony convictions seemed to dent his standing; while Biden, who’d need every vote he got in 2020, was hemorrhaging support.

Ten minutes into the debate my estimate of Biden’s November chances fell to zero (give or take, with a 3% margin of error).

My humanist book group is reading historian Jackson Lear’s Animal Spirits — tracing that concept’s salience throughout America’s story, and the depth of its human psychological appeal. Watching the debate, I couldn’t help reflecting on the relevance here of “animal spirits” propelling Trump’s appeal vis-a-vis Biden. Something the debate can only heighten.

So this should indeed be a clarifying moment. President Biden’s choice is now between a humiliating November defeat, and stepping aside for a different candidate. He originally got into this thing, in 2020, to save America from Trump. Now only his standing aside can save us from Trump. His last great service to the country.

CNN’s bipartisan discussion panel (including some savvy people like Anderson Cooper, John King, Van Jones, David Axelrod, and Abby Phillip) was pretty agreed on that view, reporting a widespread “panic” to such effect among leading Democrats erupting within minutes of the debate’s opening. But who in Biden’s inner circle can persuade him? Their being in a bubble evident from their ghastly misjudgment in welcoming this debate, given what they should have realized about how it would likely play out. And for all we saw last night, he’s still a strong willed person full of self-belief. Perhaps his wife can do the needful?

Biden can withdraw gracefully, saying that upon honest self-examination, he cannot in good conscience sign up for four more years of the world’s toughest job. And that maybe the country could benefit from putting old quarrels aside, and moving forward with a fresh start. This would have the virtue of truth and wisdom.

The Democratic party has plenty of excellent alternative candidates, like Newsom, Buttigieg, Klobuchar, Landrieu, Whitmer. The primaries being over, a Biden withdrawal now would cast the choice upon the national convention delegates. This can be done. Good old fashioned politics. And then any one of those named would clean Trump’s clock.

But this scenario looks extremely unlikely. We’re cooked.

7 Responses to “Debate Debacle: Biden Should Withdraw”

  1. Anonymous Says:

    Too late for a candidate who has some recognition in the general public.

  2. fuusainterfaithdialog Says:

    It is much harder to answer every question factually over a period of 90 minutes without occasionally having to pause for a moment and think about an answer than it is to spout a steady flow of often nonresponsive lies and trash talk the way Trump did. Biden may have at times appeared slow, but if you compare the content of their answers, Biden was clearly the winner and will continue to make a good President.

    Robb Smith

  3. Anonymous Says:

    I fear you are correct, my friend.

    Wolfgang

  4. Anonymous Says:

    A Whitmer/Buttegieg tik wood be optimal, Kamala to the Supremes. DJT will do vast damage to Ukraine & eco-adaptation, but syntelligence, amplified by post-CRISPR ‘bridging’ [vide Quanta], is propelling us to salvation. Colleagues Kurzweil & Bostrom agree. This nonagenarian tekno-radical’s prophecies are occasionally delayed, but never confounded. [Don Bronkema]

  5. Olga Z. Porterfield Says:

    Totally agree. Sob 

    Yahoo Mail: Search, Organize, Conquer

  6. Anonymous Says:

    It is pretty clear that debate prep was practicing dozens of canned answers and they were all getting jumbled in Biden’s head. Biden probably could have handled this task passibly four years ago but those days are gone. His advisors and staff need to be fired because they are not being honest with themselves or with Biden and his family. The problem is the good days/bad days of senility and aging. There are probably days when he is sharper and up to things but as time passes those days dwindle further and further. Who can step in and tell Biden it is time to step down for the good of the country?

  7. Anonymous Says:

    Yes Biden should step down. But like Ruth Bader Ginsburg he will resist and serve out his term to the detriment of the republic. His mental decline is steep and heartbreaking. The Dems have got to find a candidate who can refute Trumps lies and offer a vision that will motivate them to the polls. Merely.voting for someone because they’re not Trump will not do. The ethical and moral decline of the Supreme Court and the branches of congress threatens what is left of our liberties. We cannot afford to lose the executive branch too. As you wrote,Biden must step down and soon.-David Lettau

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