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If Not Biden, Then Who? Peter Savodnik

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A Democratic bundler who knows Newsom texted Peter Savodnik: “Gavin represents everything cartoonish about California and politicians…All the plasticky stuff middle America hates.” (Andrew Harnik via Getty Images)

On the record, everyone important in the Democratic Party is behind Joe Biden. 

“The question everyone’s asking is: ‘Who can pull together the raucous and rowdy Democratic Party coalition in a way that allows that coalition to beat the coalition pulled together by Mr. Trump,’” said Dmitri Mehlhorn, a Democratic strategist and fundraiser in northern Virginia. Melhorn insists the perfect—the only—candidate who can do that remains Joe Biden.

“Master Yoda is exactly what you need to protect against the Dark Side,” added Melhorn, who works closely with Reid Hoffman, the billionaire co-founder of LinkedIn who has become one of the party’s biggest donors. “As Joe Biden gets older, he’s like Master Yoda.”

Jamie Patricof, a movie and television producer in Los Angeles, added that debates are not that important. “If it were, then Hillary Clinton would have been president,” Patricof told me. “I trusted Joe Biden to be a great president, and he has delivered on that. I trust him to know if he can do it again.” 

So those are the kind of things prominent Democrats will say publicly. Privately, it’s a different story. 

I spent the weekend speaking to more than 20 Democratic activists, strategists, and donors who insisted the party needs to shake things up—now—if it’s going to hold on to the White House. They mentioned the names of at least 10 governors and senators who they believe could beat Trump.

“Secretly, most of the donors are worried sick and would like to see someone else on the ticket,” a Democratic fundraiser who works with elected officials and donors told me. “They’re not going to speak against him publicly, but they’re very worried—they’re sending specific suggestions about who should replace him.”

The vast majority, she said, suggested Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer. 

“Right state. Right story. A woman who doesn’t threaten men. Perfect,” a Democratic activist in Los Angeles who has worked on messaging on numerous campaigns said of Whitmer.

Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer speaks during the 69th Annual Fight For Freedom Fund Dinner at Huntington Place on May 19, 2024 in Detroit, Michigan. (Monica Morgan via Getty Images)

The governor, who is 52, won reelection in 2022 by almost 11 points—defeating a Republican Donald Trump had endorsed.

Right behind Whitmer is Wes Moore. The Maryland governor is 45, a former Rhodes Scholar who also served with the Army in Afghanistan. “Yeah, he’s incredible, just incredibly well-spoken, well-educated—the whole deal,” a Democratic consultant told me. Moore is also black, with some Cuban heritage, which Democrats hope would help counteract Trump’s huge gains with black and Latino voters over the past few years. His 2022 election was historic: Moore is Maryland’s first black governor (and only the third nationwide), and he won in a 32-point landslide.

Not only is Moore the first black governor of Maryland, but he also won in a landslide, by more than 30 points.

Andy Beshear, the 46-year-old governor of red-state Kentucky, came up in many of my conversations. “He couldn’t win Kentucky in the general against Trump,” a Democratic consultant told me, “but he doesn’t need to. He’d placate all those soft Trump voters in the suburbs—the people who will decide this election.” These are the people who voted, without much enthusiasm, for Trump in 2016, jumped to Biden in 2020, and are now up for grabs.

Then there’s Pennsylvania governor Josh Shapiro, 51. Shapiro, like Whitmer, comes from a battleground state, and, like Beshear, he has built a name for himself working across the aisle. “Kind of bland, but maybe bland works,” one Democratic activist, in Florida, told me. 

Another Democratic bundler noted that Shapiro is Jewish, adding that it’s unclear how that might play out with the delegates who would pick Biden’s replacement. Democratic delegates tend to be more progressive than Democratic voters, and the war in Gaza has inflamed tensions between progressives and supporters of Israel, which includes most Jews.

Maryland Gov. Wes Moore speaks at a campaign event for Maryland Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate Angela Alsobrooks on Gun Violence Awareness Day. ( Andrew Harnik via Getty Images)

Two other possible replacements whose names have been bandied about in the past 72 hours are Senators Mark Kelly, from Arizona—“He could deliver Arizona, and that could decide it,” one Democrat said—and Raphael Warnock, from Georgia. Warnock, like Moore, is black—and he comes from Georgia, one of the key states in Biden’s 2020 victory over Trump.

Then there’s California governor Gavin Newsom, who “looks like he was plucked out of central casting for the role” of president, a Democratic bundler in California texted me. Most say that Newsom is wildly ambitious and simply waiting for the right moment to strike—and nearly everyone agrees his odds of winning the nomination are slim to none.

“You can’t be seen to be wanting this,” a Democrat close to Newsom told me. “You just have to wait until Biden gives the cue.”

In the meantime, Newsom is doing what loyal Democrats are supposed to do: aggressively pretending he has no interest in being president.

“You don’t turn your back because of one performance,” the governor declared in a brief television interview Thursday night, shortly after the debate. “What kind of party does that?” He sounded borderline offended.

Just to make sure everyone knew just how put off he was by the idea of replacing Biden, the governor retweeted the clip to his 2.1 million followers.

A Democratic bundler who knows Newsom well texted me: “Gavin represents everything cartoonish about California and politicians (he’s also facing another recall). All the plasticky stuff middle America hates.” He said the governor would “fight like hell” for the nomination—and he hoped he didn’t get it. 

Vice President Kamala Harris, also from California, would definitely run, but she enjoys even less support among Democrats than Newsom does. In a matchup with the presumptive GOP nominee, Biden trails Trump by 1.5 points—and Harris by 6.6.

“Look, I want a female president, let alone a black female president, as much as any logical person wants it—like there’s nothing we want more,” a Democrat close to the Biden administration told me. “But just because you happen to be black and a woman doesn’t mean you’re the right person.” No one I spoke to voiced enthusiasm about a President Harris.

The big question facing the Biden campaign is how the debate affects the president’s fundraising numbers, Democrats said.

Alan Rosenblatt, a social-media strategist in Washington, D.C., who has worked for Joe Biden and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, among others, said that, in the immediate wake of the debate, Biden’s fundraising numbers had actually gone up. “I am seeing a surge of support for him online,” Rosenblatt texted me. In the 48-hour period following the debate, the president reeled in $33 million.

A Democratic consultant who toggles between Washington and Los Angeles said he wouldn’t read too much into that. “Something bad happens to your guy, and the small donors are enraged and send another ten bucks,” he said. “That’s tribal loyalty.” Trump, he noted, enjoyed a similar bump after he was convicted on 34 counts of trying to illegally influence the 2016 election, in late May.

The big question, the consultant said, is what the big-money donors do—the people throwing the big fundraisers in New York and California.

That would depend, in no small part, on the polls. The consultant said that he’d heard of several donors who had decided not to give to Biden’s campaign or the super PACs supporting him, and instead will spend on House and Senate races.

A poll conducted while the debate was taking place showed Biden slipping 8 points among Democratic-leaning voters. The polling conducted over the past 48 hours has been devastating: According to a new CBS News/YouGov poll, only 27% of respondents said that Biden had the “mental and cognitive health necessary to serve as president.”

Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro arrives to deliver remarks at the North American Building Trades Unions 2024 Legislative Conference at the Washington Hilton on April 24, 2024 in Washington, DC. (Anna Moneymaker via Getty Images)

All of this will remain in the realm of pure fantasy unless the current president of the United States decides to announce he is stepping aside and releasing his 3,894 delegates, whom he won in primaries across the country earlier this year.

If that were to happen, the would-be replacements would have to vie for the delegates’ support. Either a majority of delegates would rally around one of the would-be replacements—behind closed doors? On social media? On MSNBC? All of the above?—or there would be a protracted fight that would lead to a brokered convention, a convention in which the nominee is not selected in the first round of voting, in Chicago, in mid-August. 

No one knows exactly what a brokered convention in 2024 would look like. The last brokered convention was in 1952, when it took Democrats three ballots before they nominated Illinois governor Adlai Stevenson for president—and Stevenson lost, to Republican Dwight Eisenhower. (The last time a Democratic nominee emerged from a brokered convention and went on to win was in 1932. That was Franklin Delano Roosevelt.)

“I don’t think it’s going to happen,” Dana Perlman, a Los Angeles attorney who raised a great deal of money for Democratic presidential candidates in previous election cycles, told me. “I know I sound like an apparatchik, and I’m not.” He called Biden “the most effective” president of his life, and he was perplexed by Democrats’ “hue and cry, and rending of garments.”

Perlman added that he had known Biden for many years, and he didn’t see him backing down from the fight ahead. “He doesn’t have it in him to walk away,” he said.

As of Sunday, the Biden family was gathered at Camp David, where, according to Politico, they were variously blaming the debater’s moderators, Jake Tapper and Dana Bash, Biden advisors Anita Dunn, Bob Bauer and Ron Klain, and CNN’s makeup artists. Notably absent from that list was the president himself.

Peter Savodnik (@petersavodnik) is a writer and editor for The Free Press. Read his piece, “Welcome to the Trump Veepstakes!

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July 2, 2024 Heather Cox Richardson

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On July 2, 1776, the Second Continental Congress passed a “Resolution for Independence” declaring “That these United Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independent States, that they are absolved from all allegiance to the British Crown, and that all political connection between them and the State of Great Britain is, and ought to be, totally dissolved.”

Also known as the “Lee Resolution,” after Virginia delegate Richard Henry Lee, who had proposed it, the resolution was the final break between the king and the thirteen colonies on the North American continent that would later become the United States of America. 

The path to independence had been neither obvious nor easy. 

In 1763, at the end of what was known in the colonies as the French and Indian War, there was little indication that the colonies were about to start their own nation. The war had brought an economic boom to the colonies, and with the French giving up control of land to the west, Euro-American colonists were giddy at the prospect of moving across the Appalachian Mountains. Impressed that the king had been willing to expend such effort to protect the colonies, they were proud of their identity as members of the British empire.

That enthusiasm soon waned. 

To guard against another expensive war between colonists and Indigenous Americans, the king’s ministers and Parliament prohibited colonists from crossing the Appalachians. Then, to replenish the treasury after the last war, they passed a number of revenue laws. In 1765 they enacted the Stamp Act, which placed a tax on printed material in the colonies, everything from legal documents and newspapers to playing cards. 

The Stamp Act shocked colonists, who saw in it a central political struggle that had been going on in England for more than a century: could the king be checked by the people? Colonists were not directly represented in Parliament and believed they were losing their fundamental liberty as Englishmen to have a say in their government. They responded to the Stamp Act with widespread protests. 

In 1766, Parliament repealed the Stamp Act but linked that repeal to the Declaratory Act, which claimed for Parliament “full power and authority to make laws and statutes…to bind the colonies and people of America…in all cases whatsoever.” This act echoed the 1719 Irish Declaratory Act, which asserted that Ireland was subordinate to the British king and Parliament. It also imposed new taxes.

As soon as news of the Declaratory Act and the new taxes reached Boston in 1767, the 

Massachusetts legislature circulated a letter to the other colonies standing firm on the right to equality in the British empire. Local groups boycotted taxed goods and broke into warehouses whose owners they thought were breaking the boycott. In 1768, British officials sent troops to Boston to restore order. 

Events began to move faster and faster. In March 1770, British soldiers in Boston shot into a crowd of men and boys harassing them, killing five and wounding six others. Tensions calmed when Parliament in 1772 removed all but one of the new taxes—the tax on tea—but then, in May 1773, it tried to bail out the failing East India Company by giving it a monopoly on tea sales in the colonies. The result would be cheaper tea in the colonies, convincing people to buy it and thus establishing Parliament’s right to impose the tax.

Ships carrying the East India tea sailed for the colonies in fall 1773, but mass protests convinced the ships headed to every city but Boston to return to England. In Boston the royal governor was determined to land the cargo. On December 16, 1773, men dressed as Indigenous Americans boarded the Dartmouth, tied to a wharf in Boston Harbor, and tossed the tea overboard. Parliament promptly closed the port of Boston, strangling its economy.

In fall 1774, worried colonial delegates met as the First Continental Congress in Carpenters’ Hall in Philadelphia to figure out how to stand together against tyranny. In Massachusetts a provincial congress stockpiled weapons and supplies in Concord and called for towns to create companies of men who could be ready to fight on a minute’s notice.

British officials were determined to end the rebellion once and for all. They ordered General Thomas Gage to arrest Boston leaders Samuel Adams and John Hancock, who were rumored to be in Lexington, and to seize the supplies in Concord. On the night of April 18, 1775, the soldiers set out. The next morning, on the Lexington town green, the British regulars found several dozen minutemen waiting for them. The locals began to disperse when ordered to, but then a shot cracked through the darkness. The regulars opened fire. Eight locals were killed, another dozen wounded. 

The regulars marched on to Concord, where they found that most of the supplies had been removed. Then, when they turned to march back to Boston, they found their retreat cut off by minutemen firing from behind boulders, trees, and farmhouses. Seventy-three regular soldiers were killed, another 174 were wounded, and 26 were missing. There were 96 colonial casualties: 49 killed, 41 wounded, and 5 missing.

Before disbanding the year before, the First Continental Congress had agreed to meet again if circumstances seemed to require it. After the events at Lexington and Concord, the delegates regrouped in Philadelphia in late spring 1775, down the street from Carpenters’ Hall in the Pennsylvania State House, a building that we now know as Independence Hall.

The Second Continental Congress agreed to pull the military units around Boston into a Continental Army and put George Washington of Virginia in charge of it. But delegates also wrote directly to the king, emphasizing that they were “your Majesty’s faithful subjects.” They blamed the trouble between him and the colonies on “many of your Majesty’s Ministers,” who had “dealt out” “delusive presences, fruitless terrors, and unavailing severities” and forced the colonists to arm themselves in self-defense. They begged the king to use his power to restore harmony with the colonies. By the time the Olive Branch Petition made it to England in fall 1775, the king had already declared the colonies to be in rebellion.

In January 1776 a 47-page pamphlet, published in Philadelphia by newly-arrived immigrant Thomas Paine, provided the spark that inspired his new countrymen to make the leap from blaming the king’s ministers for their troubles to blaming the king himself. “In the following pages I offer nothing more than simple facts, plain arguments, and common sense,” Paine wrote. 

Paine rejected the idea that any man could be born to rule others, and he ridiculed the idea that an island should try to govern a continent. “Where…is the King of America?” Paine asked in Common Sense. “I’ll tell you Friend…so far as we approve of monarchy…in America THE LAW IS KING. For as in absolute governments the King is law, so in free countries the law ought to be King; and there ought to be no other.

“A government of our own is our natural right: And when a man seriously reflects on the precariousness of human affairs, he will become convinced, that it is infinitely wiser and safer, to form a constitution of our own in a cool deliberate manner, while we have it in our power, than to trust such an interesting event to time and chance. If we omit it now, some [dictator] may hereafter arise, who laying hold of popular disquietudes, may collect together the desperate and the discontented, and by assuming to themselves the powers of government, may sweep away the liberties of the continent like a deluge.”

“We have it in our power,” Paine wrote, “to begin the world over again.” 

As Common Sense swept the colonies, people echoed Paine’s call for American independence. By April 1776, states were writing their own declarations of independence, and a Virginia convention asked the Second Continental Congress to consider declaring “the United Colonies free and independent States, absolved from all allegiance to, or dependence upon, the Crown or Parliament of Great Britain.” On June 7, Lee put the resolution forward. Four days later, the Congress appointed a committee to draft such a declaration.  

Congress left time for reluctant delegates to come around to the resolution, so it was not until July 2 that the measure passed. “The Second Day of July 1776, will be the most memorable Epocha, in the History of America,” Massachusetts delegate John Adams wrote to his wife, Abigail, on July 3. While we celebrate the signing of the final form of the declaration two days later, the adoption of the Lee Resolution marked the delegates’ ultimate conviction that a nation should rest not on the arbitrary rule of a single man and his hand-picked advisors, but on the rule of law.

Notes:

https://avalon.law.yale.edu/18th_century/contcong_07-08-75.asp

John M. Barry, Roger Williams and the Creation of the American Soul: Church, State, and the Birth of Liberty (New York: Viking, 2012).

https://www.gutenberg.org/files/147/147-h/147-h.htm

https://www.archives.gov/milestone-documents/lee-resolution

https://www.nps.gov/inde/learn/historyculture/resources-declaration-secondcontinentalcongress.htm

https://www.masshist.org/digitaladams/archive/doc?id=L17760703jasecond&bc=%2Fdigitaladams%2Farchive%2Fbrowse%2Fdate%2Fall_1776.php

https://www.nps.gov/mima/learn/historyculture/april-19-1775.htm

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How ‘Misinformation’ Becomes Common Knowledge Timur Kuran

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People watch the CNN presidential debate between President Joe Biden and Republican presidential candidate and former president Donald Trump in Washington, D.C., on June 27, 2024. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

How did something considered misinformation on Thursday afternoon become common knowledge by Thursday night? 

The social mechanism that converts supposed misinformation into consensus is a topic that I have studied for many years. It involves something ubiquitous: the twin acts of misrepresenting what we know and what we want under perceived social pressures. As I explained in my book, Private Truths, Public Lies, such expressions of insincerity can do serious harm. The Biden-Trump debate and its aftermath provide a powerful case in point. Allow me to explain.

Until Thursday night’s CNN debate, a majority of Democrats were afraid to tell a basic truth in public—to say openly what they know about Joe Biden’s physical and mental health—for fear of emboldening Donald Trump or taking a position that may seem adverse to their party. So they kept their knowledge of his declining cognitive abilities private and, in public, conveyed impressions and issued reports at odds with their own senses. 

If they felt that a different candidate had a higher chance of beating Trump, with rare exception they kept that preference hidden and pretended to agree with the idea, repeated ad infinitum, that Biden remained the party’s best hope. 

Preference and Knowledge Falsification

Why did they do this? Fear. Fear, in this case, of being punished by their fellow Democrats.

Fear of being punished by a crowd is not unique to Democrats, or liberals, or Americans. It is an innate human response to the dangers of being ostracized, to being cut off from friendships and privileges that are critical to survival. We are born with a need for social acceptance. That need is what drives knowledge falsification and preference falsification

Each of these—misrepresenting what you know and what you prefer—is a special form of lying. Most “in the know” Democrats engaged in both over the past few years: knowledge falsification about Biden’s decline and preference falsification about whether he should be the party’s nominee.

So even as hardly a day passed without new video clips showing a disoriented and frail Biden, Democrats, aided by swaths of left-leaning media, rushed to dismiss the clips as taken out of context, or as misleading because of the cameraman’s perspective, or as malicious misinformation. They would also vilify the producers and spreaders of the videos as MAGA villains out to destroy democracy. In no uncertain terms, qualms about Biden’s age or cognitive capacity were treated as unwelcome, even as a betrayal of democracy itself.

Those Democrats who refused to lie about what they knew once they knew it—people like Dean Phillips and, much later, Ezra Klein—surely sensed that Biden’s condition could not remain a secret forever. And they worried that, should the news spread before Election Day, he could lose votes essential to winning. Better to preempt that eventuality, they argued, by picking a younger candidate while time remains for him or her to gain national name recognition. If the stakes are democracy, could there be any other choice?

But the Biden campaign would have none of it. Talk of replacing Biden was regarded as irresponsible, meant to push away voters Democrats need— and, they argued, it would facilitate Trump’s return. Insiders also brought up—more commonly in private conversations than in public settings—an obstacle to getting the party to unite around an alternative nominee. Were Biden to bow out, Vice President Kamala Harris might create an even bigger problem. Despite her low approval ratings, she would likely insist on moving to the top of the ticket. Other candidates could emerge, triggering accusations of racism and sexism, fracturing the party. Whatever the resolution, the infighting would cause epic Democratic losses up and down the ballot.

And so, for the first half of 2024, the majority of Democrats who favored Biden’s retirement kept their preferences private.

A Trap of Their Own Making

As signs of Biden’s diminished mental acuity mounted, knowledge and preference falsification trapped Democratic elites. Though few implored Biden to step aside in the months and weeks before the CNN debate, Democratic officeholders and an overwhelming majority of Democratic journalists maintained a facade of unity. To individual doubters, this unity posed an insurmountable obstacle to speaking truthfully. It meant that they were likely to face accusations of betrayal alone, possibly even without backing from friends. Although the private doubters of nominating Biden may have had the edge numerically against his genuine supporters, the doubters had no way to mobilize. Because they kept their private truths hidden, they could not even find each other, much less coordinate their actions and form an effective anti-Biden coalition. 

Knowledge and preference falsification can do far more damage than mere self-censorship. In this case, Democrats close to Biden, and thereby “in the know,” deliberately misled their fellow Democrats into thinking that chatter about Biden’s deterioration was merely propaganda orchestrated by Republicans and their allies. They circulated cherry-picked videos of choreographed events as ostensible proof that Biden was as sharp as ever. In March, they proclaimed that Biden’s State of the Union address, in which he read a prepared speech from a teleprompter, should put to rest questions about his fitness.

Knowledge and preference falsification pollute the bodies of information that individuals use in developing their understandings of the world and their rankings among options. They misinform the polity about what is known and preferred. They conceal feasible options. They obscure the extent of support for changing direction. In fostering a culture of mendacity, they hinder the identification of discontent and compound the difficulties of forming coalitions among people eager to switch course.

The Trap Shatters                     

The self-imposed Democratic trap shattered in the first few minutes of the CNN debate. Posts on X and calls from horrified Democrats set off an open national conversation. Long-apprehensive Democratic-aligned journalists, officeholders, and other influential party members finally found in themselves the courage to voice what they have known and wanted, but suppressed.

As Biden spoke incoherently, his debility became common knowledge. Suddenly everyone knew—and everyone knew that everyone knew. Because tens of millions of Americans were watching, every viewer understood that all other viewers, whatever their political biases, were witnessing the same thing. No amount of spin could overcome what we were seeing with our own eyes.

The trap’s collapse made fear among many Democratic elites flip sides. Their predominant pre-debate fear of signaling reservations about Biden’s candidacy gave way to an ascendant and now-dominant fear of continuing to endorse the approved narrative. 

But by no means were the Democratic opinion leaders who exploded in horror after the debate alone in initiating a national conversation on Biden’s candidacy. The Democratic rank-and-file played a critical role in pressuring elites to start saying what they had known long before the debate.

Most Americans are detached from the twists and turns of daily news cycles. They tune in only during major crises and elections. So to many of these Democratic voters, Biden’s performance came as a genuine shock. 

We will never know whether Democratic elites would have dismantled their self-destructive trap without a flood of honest reactions from the Democratic rank-and-file. The president’s performance was so disastrous that it might have been sufficient to drive enough elites to their boiling points to start a cascade of truthfulness among themselves. 

It may have made all the difference that a huge national audience watched the debate live. If the debate had not been televised, with only the press witnessing it, reporters might have been able to spin the exchange as a win for Biden by focusing on Trump’s wild exaggerations and his non-answers, along with some Biden mini-quotes that seem coherent on paper. In other words, the out-in-the-open, live nature of the debate may have been critical to generating the common knowledge of Biden’s current state.

One thing is certain: the discovery by Democratic elites of Biden’s deterioration on Thursday night was mostly feigned. Individually and collectively, they chose not to convey truthfully what they knew or what decisions they considered necessary for electoral success. They knew. But like many human beings faced with the consequences of telling the truth, they opted to misinform.

Timur Kuran is a professor of economics and political science at Duke University. He is also the author of many books, including the seminal Private Truths, Public Lies. Follow him on X @timurkuran. 

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Joe Nocera: Mind the Gap Joe Nocera

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“The Biden debacle is just the latest example of the gap between what many of us believe to be true, because we’ve seen it with our own eyes, and what the ‘arbiters’ of truth allow us to say.” (Photo by Heritage Art/Heritage Images via Getty Images)

I was in my car, listening to Morning Joe on SiriusXM, on the morning of June 4, the day The Wall Street Journal published a story documenting what we all saw Thursday night: President Joe Biden “slipping,” as the headline put it.

In addition to quotes, both anonymous and on the record, about Biden’s mental acuity, the article detailed three meetings during which the president’s “level of engagement was uneven.” The Journal quoted a participant at one of the meetings saying, “You couldn’t be there and not feel uncomfortable. I’ll just say that.”

And how did the hosts and guests on Morning Joe react to this well-reported story with its wealth of telling details? With venom. Instead of acknowledging that it might have some validity, they derided the article. “This does have the feeling of Trump acolytes laundering their attacks through a reputable, prestigious news organization,” said co-host Willie Geist. 

“This was a classic, classic hit piece, probably ordered up by the 93-year-old, fifth-time married Rupert Murdoch over the weekend,” added Morning Joe regular Mike Barnicle.

In fact, it was anything but a hit piece. Rather, it was the product of journalism’s essential function: finding out the truth, and then bringing that truth to the public. Indeed, according to the Journal, Biden’s problems—problems most elderly people face sooner or later—were not some kind of new phenomenon. One of the meetings the Journal recounted took place 14 months ago, in May 2023.


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