Twenty-three people are running for
the Democratic nomination for President of the United States. From
where I sit, at least half of them are only running for exposure, for
the Vice-Presidential nod, for Cabinet secretary, to push a platform,
or to simply be seen. Their ambitions have made the process turgid
and impractical, often amusing and only sometimes illuminating.
The
candidates do best when they have time to expound on their ideas, as
they did at Rev. William Barber's Poor People's Congress on June 17,
or at Rev. Jesse Jackson's National Rainbow Coalition International
Convention June 28-July 2. Barber's meeting drew nine candidates,
each who had the opportunity to give a four-minute speech and 26
minutes of questioning from Rev. Barber. The Rainbow PUSH gathering
drew seven candidates who had about 15 minutes to address those
assembled. Vice-President Biden, Senator Elizabeth Warren, and
Mayors Bill Di Blasio and Pete Buttigieg had press conferences with
Rev. Jackson. Senators Harris and Booker attended neither meeting,
although they were invited to both. With a crowded field and
calendar, it is clear that everybody can't be everywhere, but I'd
like the two African American Senators to explain why they snubbed
two of our nation's most prominent African American leaders.
Memo
to Andrew Yang, Marianne Williamson, Montana Governor Steve Bullock,
Miramar, FL Mayor Wayne Messam, and a few others, what are you
running for, really? You've got ideas – doesn't everybody?
But you have about as good a chance of being President as the
proverbial snowball has a chance of surviving Hades. You've raised a
little money, and you've got a skeleton staff. Why not sit home and
write op-eds about your good ideas? Somebody will publish them.
Memo
to California Congressman Eric Swalwell (who dropped out shortly
after this commentary was written) – age baiting is neither
thoughtful nor cute. It's fine to tell Vice-President Joe Biden to
"pass the torch" once, but to say it more than once seems
like badgering and makes you look like a junior high school heckler.
Biden should have come back at you for hedging your bets. You told
the San Francisco Chronicle that, while you are running for
President, you haven't closed the door on keeping your congressional
seat. You have until December to decide, you say. Do us all a
favor. Decide now!
Memo
to Beto O'Rourke. Just like the South lost the Civil War, you lost
the Senate race in 2018. Losing a statewide competition is hardly
the foundation for a successful Presidential run. You were a
nondescript Congressman that sponsored little legislation, a
Democratic sensation mainly because you came close to toppling the
odious Senator Cruz. But what do you stand for other than white male
exuberance, jumping up on tables with the wild hand gestures? Run
for Senate in Texas again. Maybe you'd win and really make a
difference!
Memo
to Julian Castro. Don't patronize your own community by speaking
Spanish poorly. I think Latino people care more about your policy
positions than your Spanish language ability. Good move in going
after Beto O'Rourke in the debates on immigration issues. Wrong move
in missing the Poor People's Congress after confirming that you'd be
there.
Memo
to Vice-President Biden. You're better than your act, better than
your debate performance, better than your wandering, long-winded
speeches. I know you've been doing you for a long time, and the
wordy gaffes seem to work for you. Actually, they don't. There's
nothing wrong with saying you made a mistake, nothing wrong with
apologizing to Anita Hill, which you haven't done yet, nothing wrong
with talking about busing unapologetically. If you don't get your
act together, Elizabeth Warren and Kamala Harris are going to make
mincemeat out of you.
It's
only July, seven long months before the February 3, 2020, Iowa
caucuses. Only July, eight months before the delegate-rich Super
Tuesday, March 3, 2020, when at least 15 states, including Texas and
California, will hold primaries, and 1321 Democratic delegates will
be up for grabs. It's the beginning of July, and by month's end,
there will be yet another debate with 20 people on the stage in two
clumps. We won't learn much at these debates, because they are less
debate than guided conversation with interruptions and outbursts.
What
we must know, even at this point in July, is that all twenty-three
candidates aren't running for President. At least half of them are
simply running for exposure, and most of the nation is not paying
attention. Can you name all 23 candidates without the use of Google?
Probably not. I got to 21 before I had to check. I left out
Massachusetts Congressman Seth Moulton, former Alaska Senator Mike
Gravel, and Montana Governor Steve Bullock. They've made quite an
impression! Running for exposure is a costly venture and a
Constitutionally guaranteed right. I'm not so sure it's a good idea,
at least where some of these candidates are concerned.
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