He's the same candidate he was before the South
Carolina primary—and that could be a problem.
By Patrick
Buchanan
A week ago, the
candidacy of Joe Biden was at death’s door.
On a taping
of “The McLaughlin Group,” this writer suggested
it might be time to “call the rectory” and have
the monsignor come render last rites.
Today,
Biden’s candidacy is not only alive. He is first
in votes, victories and delegates, and is
favored to win the nomination and, by most
polls, to defeat Donald Trump in November.
“The World
Turned Upside Down” was a song the British army
band is said to have played at the surrender of
Lord Cornwallis at Yorktown. That title applies
to what happened in the U.S. political world in
the five days from Feb. 29 to March 4.
Going into
South Carolina on Feb. 29, Joe Biden had run a
miserable and losing campaign.
Starting as
the odds-on favorite for the nomination, he
finished fourth in the Iowa caucuses, fifth in
New Hampshire and then was routed by Bernie
Sanders in the Nevada caucuses. His fundraising
was anemic. His debate performances ranged from
tolerable to terrible.
On the eve of
South Carolina, his proclaimed “firewall,” the
media conceded he might win but wrote him off as
a probable fatality on Super Tuesday when 14
states went to the polls.
Then came
South Carolina Rep. Jim Clyburn’s endorsement of
Biden, which solidified and energized the
African American vote in the Palmetto State and
led to a Biden blowout in Saturday’s primary.
The nonstop
free and favorable publicity Biden gained from
the victory created a momentum that Mike
Bloomberg’s billions could not buy. Over that
weekend came the withdrawal of Mayor Pete
Buttigieg and Amy Klobuchar and endorsements by
both of Biden as the party’s best hope against
Donald Trump.
Came then
Biden’s sweep of 10 of the 14 states holding
primaries on Super Tuesday. Wednesday saw the
withdrawal of Bloomberg, who endorsed Biden and
pledged his vast fortune to help Joe and the
party defeat Trump in November.
Moreover, for
Trump, as Claudius observed in “Hamlet,” “When
sorrows come, they come not single spies but in
battalions.”
For 10 days,
the Dow Jones average has gyrated wildly, wiping
out trillions of dollars in wealth, while the
coronavirus slowly claimed victims and dominated
the world’s media. Predictions of a pandemic, a
global economic downturn and a national
recession were everywhere.
All in all, a
triumphal week for Biden, who racked up 11 state
primary victories. Before last Saturday, he had
not won a single primary in three presidential
campaigns.
But if
earlier reports of the demise of Joe Biden were
premature, so, too, are today’s confident
predictions of a Biden sweep this November,
marching over the political corpse of Trump and
bringing in a Democratic Senate and Democratic
House.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
As
Yogi Berra said, “It ain’t over till
it’s over.”
Bernie
Sanders’ “Revolution” remains unreconciled to a
Beltway-Biden restoration, against which many of
the Democratic candidates railed before dropping
out, including Elizabeth Warren.
Sanders, for
whom this is the last hurrah, must decide
whether he wants to go down fighting for his
cause or stack arms and march into Biden’s camp.
If Sanders
chooses to fight, he can, even in near-certain
defeat, be victorious in history if his
“movement” one day captures the national party
as it has captured a plurality of the party’s
young.
If Sanders
goes into the coming debates and forces Biden to
defend his votes — for George Bush’s war in Iraq
and for NAFTA and WTO trade concessions to
Communist China — he may still be crushed.
But Sanders
is a true believer. And, for such as these, it
is better to die on the hill you have lived and
fought on than to march into camp to be patted
on the head by an establishment that secretly
detests you.
Then there is
Biden’s vulnerability.
He may be
hailed by a fickle media as a conquering hero
today. But after the cheering stops, Biden is
going to be, for the next eight months, the same
candidate he has been for the last eight months.
Here is a description of that candidate by
The
New York Times
the day after
his Super Tuesday triumph:
“Any
suggestion that Mr. Biden is now a risk-free
option would appear to contradict the available
evidence. He is no safer with a microphone, no
likelier to complete a thought without
exaggeration or bewildering detour.
“He has not,
as a 77-year-old man proudly set in his ways,
acquired new powers of persuasion or management
in the 72 hours since the first primary state
victory of his three presidential campaigns.
“Mr. Biden
has blundered this chance before — the
establishment front-runner; the last, best hope
for moderates — fumbling his initial 2020
advantages in a hail of disappointing
fund-raising, feeble campaign organization and
staggering underperformance.”
It ain’t over
till it’s over.
Patrick J.
Buchanan is the author of
Nixon’s White House Wars: The Battles That Made
and Broke a President and Divided America
Forever. - "Source"
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