MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
As Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg‘s death roils the media-sphere, Democrats still see a Trump defeat as contingent on COVID. “This has been an incredibly stable race,” one Biden campaign pollster says. “I still think a plurality of people believe this issue makes no difference in how they would vote.”
By Chris Smith @ VanityFair.com/TheHive, Sept. 22
[....] The policy consequences of Trump choosing her replacement, including the reversal of Roe v. Wade and the repeal of Obamacare, stand to be catastrophic for millions of people. The political consequences for the next two months are harder to predict. Do more conservatives turn out in November, thrilled that their bet on Trump is paying off and eager to give him and Mitch McConnell four more years of shoving the judiciary, at all levels, to the right? Or do enraged liberals and younger voters show up in record numbers, delivering not just a landslide for Biden but a Senate majority for the Democrats?
The immediate problem for Biden, however, is exactly what Reines identified. Every minute that Trump spends talking about something other than his pandemic and economic failures is a win for him. He will be abetted in this diversion by the mainstream media’s coverage of Ginsburg’s death and the battle to replace her. Not that those subjects aren’t richly deserving of major coverage—they are. But they represent the kind of inside-the-Beltway set piece that the cable-news networks in particular love. They will fill many hours parsing the posturings of the confirmation hearing and carrying Trump’s daily appearances talking up his nominee.
All of that is bad for Biden—something his campaign recognized even before the candidate’s plane touched down Friday night, delivering him back home to Delaware from an appearance in Duluth, Minnesota. The theory of Biden’s case has always been that the coronavirus and the economy are the central concerns for voters, and they don’t see any reason to deviate from those themes now. “The narratives out there that this is going to dominate what voters want their presidential candidates to talk about—I think that is a real big misread,” says John Anzalone, a Biden campaign pollster. “Sixty-something percent of people still are very concerned about COVID and concerned about the economy. This has been an incredibly stable race. I still think you’re going to see a plurality of people believe that this issue makes no difference in how they would vote. And that the handling of COVID, the economy, and the recovery, and health care are going to still be the drivers.”
That steady focus fits with Biden’s personality, and with his greatest appeal against Trump: his calm and his attention to substance. Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren were the angry candidates; Biden isn’t about to change what won him the Democratic primary, and he isn’t about to alienate moderates by coming out in favor of court packing. The risks are that, with so much at stake and emotions so high, Biden’s low-key approach looks complacent and his message gets drowned out. That’s why he delivered a forceful speech on Sunday afternoon in Philadelphia calling on Senate Republicans to hold off confirming Trump’s Supreme Court nominee (highly unlikely then, moot now). The more important element of Biden’s remarks, though, was his attempt to fold the nomination fight into one of his core arguments, highlighting how Trump and Republicans want to strip health care from Americans even as the pandemic death toll in the U.S. has climbed to more than 200,000. [....]
Comments
Also see "IF YOU CARE ABOUT THE COURT, DON’T TALK ABOUT IT Fixating on the open Supreme Court seat will provoke a culture war. on Sun, 09/20/2020 - 9:31pm
“Polarization is a well-known authoritarian tactic.” @anneapplebaum is always worth reading, this especially
by artappraiser on Sat, 09/26/2020 - 5:46am
by artappraiser on Sat, 09/26/2020 - 5:21pm
Yup, exactly, proof GOP campaigns want everyone (new swing states especially) talking about the Supreme Court and not covid:
IT'S CULTURE WAR DESPERATION TIMEI Red alert!
If only Jerry Fallwell Sr. could be risen from the dead.
Lee Atwater, too, he would know how can we tie in rising violent crime rate with abortion without distracting too much from abortion debates.
Liberal people slurring Catholicism = GREAT START! Keep it up! More's the better! Keep arguing about it! Bring up religious freedom, argue some more, keep screaming and protestin' till Nov. 2.
by artappraiser on Sat, 09/26/2020 - 5:32pm
by artappraiser on Sun, 09/27/2020 - 12:33am