Ten days ago I conceded that it was time for President Biden to step aside and let another candidate run on the Democratic ticket. In a surprise to no one who knows his character, he (once again) put his country first and did just that. The response has been overwhelming and could be just what the country needs to preserve its democracy.
More HERE.
Statement from former President Barack Obama
Statement from Bill and Hillary Clinton
On a lighter note:
From the New York Times Editorial Board:
President Biden’s decision to exit the 2024 presidential election is a fitting coda for a man whose life has been devoted to public service. Mr. Biden has served the nation well as its president. By agreeing to step down when his term ends in January, he is greatly increasing the chance that his party is able to protect the nation from the dangers of returning Donald Trump to the presidency.
Majorities of Americans have consistently said they did not believe Mr. Biden could lead the nation for another term, citing longstanding fears about his age and fitness that have only grown in recent months. Had he remained at the top of the ticket, he would have greatly increased the likelihood of Mr. Trump retaking the presidency and potentially controlling both houses of Congress as well. Mr. Biden himself has consistently warned that specter presents a profound threat to the nation and its democratic traditions.
Mr. Biden has now done what Mr. Trump never will: He has placed the national interest above his own pride and ambition.
Mr. Biden’s departure gives Democrats an opportunity to refocus public attention from questions about the president’s fitness to the manifest moral and temperamental unfitness of Mr. Trump — and to the dangers of rearming him with the considerable powers of the presidency.
The next Democratic nominee should acknowledge and offer solutions for the pain and disruptions caused by uncontrolled immigration. America needs immigrants. The nation also needs better policies for controlling their flow into the country.
Voters are angry about the cost of living. Democrats particularly need to offer better ideas for addressing the biggest line item in most household budgets: the high cost of housing.
And Mr. Biden’s successor needs to engage with the American people. Mr. Biden has had fewer unscripted interactions with the public and the news media than any other president in recent decades, often leaving voters with a sense that he was hiding from the public. A new presidential candidate should demonstrate exactly the opposite tendency, showing both a willingness to be open about plans for the future and a real interest in what voters have to say in return.
In a social media post on Sunday afternoon, Mr. Biden said he was endorsing Vice President Kamala Harris to take his place at the top of the ticket. She is an accomplished leader and a forceful and eloquent campaigner and is likely to be a far more persuasive candidate than Mr. Biden. She would hold Mr. Trump to account for his lies and destructive policies in a way that Mr. Biden’s infirmities have left him unable to do.
Choosing Ms. Harris would be a reasonable path for Democrats to take; she has been Mr. Biden’s running mate, and while no votes were cast for her as a presidential candidate in primaries, the president’s voters expected her to be on the ticket in November.
Nonetheless, party delegates should have a voice in a decision of this consequence. There are other qualified Democrats who could take on Mr. Trump and win, and picking a candidate without a real contest is how the party got into a position of anointing a standard-bearer that large majorities of Democrats and independents had profound concerns about. While the hour is late, there is still time to put leading candidates through a process of public scrutiny before the party’s nominating convention begins on Aug. 19, to inform the choice of a nominee and to build public support.
Whether the party chooses Ms. Harris or another Democrat, the nominee should convince voters that he or she will emulate Mr. Biden’s approach to working with Congress. In an era of intense polarization, Mr. Biden eschewed the satisfactions of principled stands in favor of the compromises necessary to make tangible progress. He engaged respectfully and honorably with Republicans.
The resulting victories included major investments in improving infrastructure and reducing inequality, as well as laws addressing gun violence, modernizing the air traffic control system, protecting same-sex marriage and investing in semiconductor manufacturing. Similar compromises are needed to rewrite the nation’s immigration laws, to craft an equitable replacement for Mr. Trump’s 2017 tax cuts and to pass laws helping working parents.
Most of all, as president, Mr. Biden has stood on the side of the values that have long defined America: a commitment to freedom, a respect for the rule of law and a belief that pluralism is a fundamental source of the nation’s strength. His administration, the most diverse in American history, embodies those values. It has worked to improve the lives of all Americans and to give Americans the opportunity to build better lives.
When Mr. Biden began his campaign in 2019, he told supporters that Mr. Trump would be defeated and that history would come to regard Mr. Trump’s four years in office as an “aberrant moment.” Mr. Biden has played his part, but the democratic project is never complete. That work now passes to the next generation of political leaders and to the American people.
3 comments:
Hi, a friend was wondering who to credit for the Kamala/Rosie the riveter painting? Can she use this image for a yard sign? Thanks for any info you have!
Mrs. V: Sorry, wish I could be more helpful.
Karma via Kamala ! :)
The NYT and MSM should be ashamed of themselves for tearing into President Biden and being silent about the criminally insane Trump.
Project 2025 would do away with a free press and neither the NYT or MSM would be safe, contrary to their thinking.
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