Post-Debate Panic? Biden Gets Up and Keeps Fighting, But Should He Leave Race?

by Emil Guillermo

Joe Biden admitted he’s no longer a young man, who doesn’t walk, talk or debate like he used to.

“But I know what I know what I do know,” he said at a rally in New York recently. “I know how to tell the truth.”

He was holding on to the only positive from the recent debate. Trump lied with vigor. Biden seemed tired, flat, and out of gas.

But at least he didn’t lie like Trump.

So far, Biden’s not listening to the ageist pundits and editorialists like those at the New York Times urging him to step aside.

Why should he give up to a convicted felon, found guilty of sexual assault, who just happens to be leading in the polls? Why does America want to stoop so low?

The earliest presidential debate in U.S. history was supposed to reset the campaign for Biden, the president with a 38% approval rating.

Instead, we are left wondering who has the tougher choice—voters or Joe Biden. Four more years—but is he able?

It was not a good debate for the president.

But he may have found his secret weapon–the first African American- Asian American vice president ever–Kamala Harris.

After Biden’s lackluster performance, Harris went on CNN and, like a good veep, stood up for her boss.

“What we saw tonight is the President making a very clear contrast with Donald Trump on all the issues that matter to the American people,” Harris said.

“Yes, there was a slow start, but it was a strong finish. And what became very clear through the course of the night is that Joe Biden is fighting on behalf of the American people on substance, on policy, on performance. Joe Biden is extraordinarily strong.”

Harris also looked strong. She was filled with an appealing youthful political vigor.

It was everything Joe Biden wasn’t on in the recent debate.

There’s no spinning that.

But Harris wasn’t spinning. She acknowledged it was rough the first few minutes, including a moment where Biden seemed to lose his thoughts. Was he talking about Covid? Medicare?

And then there was Trump.

45 may have sounded louder and clearer than 46, but that doesn’t mean with all his lies and guilty verdicts he deserves to be 47.

By CNN’s own count, both men made misstatements, but Trump made dozens of lies, triple the number of Biden’s, and more consequential.

Here’s a short list:

Trump said the U.S. currently has the biggest budget deficit ever. That happened under Trump, the tax cutter.

Trump said food prices quadrupled under Biden. That was an overstatement.

Trump said he signed the largest tax cut in U.S. history. It wasn’t.

Trump downplayed his role on Jan. 6 and said Rep. Nancy Pelosi turned down his request to send in 10,000 National Guard troops that day. No such offer was made to Pelosi. In fact, the president, not Pelosi, had the power to deploy the DC guard. He didn’t.

Trump said he never called dead service members “suckers and losers,” but it was verified by former Trump Chief of Staff John Kelly in The Atlantic magazine.

One lie I knew instantly came when Trump said he didn’t have sex with a porn star. But Stormy Daniels testified under oath that Trump did, just not very satisfyingly.

The Choice
So ask yourself who is more presidential: the immoral man who lies loudly or the moral man who apparently was recovering from a recent cold?

Biden may have had a bad 90 minutes in the debate, but that doesn’t erase the good he’s done the last four years in action.

Or does it?

Pre-debate, I thought Biden had to check some things off for me.

I presumed he’d win on policy.

But Biden had to deliver on the three visceral E’s.

He need to give voters a reason to get enthusiastic about his existing presidency.

He had to show he had the energy to do the job for another four years.

And he had to avoid embarrassment. That, I figured, might be the hardest, but he only had one really bad verbal lapse.

But combined with the scratchiness in his voice, his performance did not inspire confidence.

Trump was more of an embarrassment, though, lying about things you don’t normally hear about in a presidential debate like sleeping with Stormy Daniels and being called out by Biden for the E. Jean Carroll sexual assault rape case.

Commentators in post-debate analysis seemed quick to pounce on Biden more than Trump.

Wouldn’t you rather vote on the Biden record, both as a man and as a president, which is much better than he gets credit for?

On the economy and jobs, on the defense of reproductive rights, on civil rights.

Biden also doesn’t have Trump’s 34 felony convictions, a point that came up but was never effectively highlighted by Biden.

Instead, Trump used it to bring up more lies, baselessly suggesting Biden’s possible criminality connected to his son Hunter.

Whenever that sort of thing happened, I just thought of the direct comparison between Trump and Biden on Asian American issues.

One of the first things Biden did when he became president was to protect Filipino Asian Americans under siege during the pandemic.

That’s how bad it was after Trump, the “Kung Flu” president, scapegoated our entire community.

Post-Debate Polls
If a debate is intended to help clarify support for a candidate going forward, this one just made things more unclear.

I had said Biden’s 38% approval rating was so low that we might have another Hillary Clinton situation, in which Democrats win the popular vote but lose undecided voters in key swing states.

After the debate, some commentators on CNN and MSNBC reported that high-level Democrats were panicked, worried that if Biden were still at the top of the ticket, it would be disastrous for Democrats down ballot.

Some were texting the woefully acronym, “FML,”  (eff-my-life).

Was the debate that bad?

Style-wise, yes.

The flash polls CNN took among debate watchers indicated style did matter, with Trump beating Biden, 67% to 33%.

But did the debate change the mind of any voters?

81 percent of poll respondents said the debate had no effect. That’s way more than the 5% who said they had changed their mind. Or the 14% who said they are now reconsidering their vote.

More optimistic were surrogates like Harris and fellow Californian Governor Gavin Newsom, who had strong words for those who might think Biden should be replaced before the Democratic convention.

“We’ve got to have the back of this president,” Newsom told MSNBC. “You don’t turn your back because of one performance. What kind of party does that?”

Newsom cited 15.6 million jobs added under Biden, more than eight times the number from the last three Republican presidents combined.

“This president delivered; we need to deliver for him,” said Newsom, as he tried to put a stop to talk about replacing Biden.

“It’s unhelpful to our democracy, to the future of this country, and the world. They need us right now to step up, and that’s exactly what I intend to do right now.”

It was a pep talk the Democrats didn’t figure they’d need prior to the debate.

What would be more telling is if Joe Biden looks at the debate video the day after.

Would he like his own performance, or be honest enough to make the tough call himself for his party and his country? To retire graciously into private life.

After the debate, we may be at that point.

If not, expect to see a lot more of Kamala Harris, Gavin Newsom, and others standing up for Biden.

Harris, in particular, showed last night how she may be the best thing in a Biden-Harris ticket.

Republicans have already shown an eagerness to go racist and misogynist against Harris, one reason the Biden administration seemingly has kept her hidden.

But with reproductive rights of women one of the strongest issues the Democrats have, leaning in on the vice president at this point may be the Democrats’ best, if not only, answer.

EMIL GUILLERMO is a journalist and commentator. He covered politics from Hawaii to California to Washington, DC, where he was the host of NPR’s “All Things Considered.”  See him on YouTube.com/@emilamok1.

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