Among things we can do together to try preventing the president from stealing the election is demanding more from the pundit corps. (This includes yours truly.) We are entering a dangerous period fraught with instability and apprehension as well as potential for violence and bloodshed. Donald Trump is most likely to contest anything that’s short of a landslide for Joe Biden. The president is almost certain to drag the process out well into 2021. Moreover, he has friends and allies inside and outside the GOP and law enforcement able to use extra-legal means of keeping him in power.
As Nils Gilman, of the Transition Integrity Project, told USA Today, the president will “create as many possible pre-narratives for claiming that the results are not legitimate. He wants to create fear, uncertainty and doubt so that people feel frozen and paralyzed, and then the man of action, Trump himself, can ride in and seize the day.”
This is a time for grave seriousness from the pundit corps, especially those with the biggest megaphones. This is not a time to tolerate punditry-as-usual, which is more about entertainment and pose-striking than hard-nosed polemics. I think most of us get it (Gilman and TIP co-founder Rosa Brooks certainly do), but many of us don’t. They are still making pre-2016 arguments for a post-2016 America spiraling madly. Use your free speech to urge them to face reality and force them to snap out of it.
Case in point is SE Cupp. She’s a New York Daily News columnist and CNN host. She’s white, conventionally attractive, wears black glasses and gives the impression of being a deep thinker. In her latest, she said the choice between voting for Biden and a write-in candidate (she’s against Trump) depends on Biden’s choice of a running mate. “As a staunch conservative who has voted Republican in past elections, I don’t take this lightly. I don’t agree with everything that Biden supports, nor am I 100 percent comfortable with the direction he wants to take the country. … For moderates like me who are looking for reasons to vote for Biden, we need to know who’s on that ticket, and soon. I’m hoping, for the sake of the country, he chooses someone I can support.”
For the curious, Cupp likes Kamala Harris, dislikes Susan Rice. (They are reportedly Biden’s top two picks.) It would be interesting if Cupp were to say Harris could ignite the Democratic base, especially Black Democrats and Democrats of color, thus doing the most to ensure Trump’s defeat in a tidal wave. Alas, Cupp doesn’t go there. Instead, she leans into the false thesis of needing a good reason to vote for Biden, as if nearly four years of authoritarianism, corruption, madness and treason were not enough.
Fact is, no one knows if running mates have any effect on voter behavior. Few people base their vote on the person running with a nominee. (The exception widely cited is Sarah Palin.) This goes double this year, because many Americans who say they are voting for Biden aren’t really voting for Biden. They are voting against Trump, which means Biden himself is a secondary thought, which means his running mate is a tertiary thought — if they’re thinking about vice presidents at all, which is unlikely.
Making Cupp’s thesis more absurd: Writing in a candidate is throwing her vote away, which means Biden is the only choice, no matter who his VP pick, if she really means it when she says she’s “sick of all the crap”: “The gaslighting, the puerile tweets, the divisiveness, the rampant ignorance and the utter inability to put the country before his fragile ego. I’m ready to move on, I’m ready to make the presidency normal again.”
To the extent that she insists that writing in a candidate is legitimate, I don’t know what to say, because that’s not voting against Trump. That’s voting for someone who will have no impact, which means Cupp’s opposition to Trump isn’t serious, which means a column about how much depends on Biden’s pick is just striking a pose.
No one knows if running mates matter, but an argument about Harris as Biden’s running mate is a good argument. To pick Harris is to say to the Democratic base: yes, it can happen here. A United States senator from California, former prosecutor and biracial daughter of immigrants could be president one day — if you make it happen. Even if that never happens, the mere possibility of it happening would be enough, in the age of Donald Trump, to supercharge Democratic turnout, fueling a landslide election, which is probably the only thing that would push Trump out of office.
And yet Cupp doesn’t go there.
Ultimately, I think Cupp and others aren’t adapting to our new age of danger, because they don’t want to let go of the old regime once so nurturing to their respective styles of conservative thought. That time is long gone. We are no longer in an age of rugged individualism, because we can’t be. Anything short of we’re-all-in-this-together might kill us all.
Push pundits to accept reality, expect more, or demand they move on.
John Stoehr is the editor and publisher of The Editorial Board, a contributing writer for Washington Monthly and the former managing editor of The Washington Spectator. He was a lecturer in political science at Yale where he taught a course on the history of modern campaign reporting. He is a fellow at the Yale Journalism Initiative and at Yale’s Ezra Stiles College.
Copyright ©2020 John Stoehr — distributed by Agence Global
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Released: 07 August 2020
Word Count: 860
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