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NYTimes
New York Times
3 Feb 2024
Ezra Klein


NextImg:Opinion | The Democratic Party Is Having an ‘Identity Crisis’

“Look, I view myself as a bridge, not as anything else,” Joe Biden said at a rally four years ago in Detroit, flanked by Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, and Senators Cory Booker and Kamala Harris. “There’s an entire generation of leaders you saw standing behind me. They are the future of this country.”

That was the line then. Biden was the old warrior strapping on his armor one last time. Once Donald Trump was vanquished, the new guard could take over. “If Biden is elected,” a Biden adviser told Politico in 2019, “he’s going to be 82 years old in four years and he won’t be running for re-election.” The Democratic Party was becoming something else. Perhaps a party built around democratic socialism, as Bernie Sanders and A.O.C. would have it. Perhaps a party more firmly rooted in identity and diversity. Either way, Biden was the last of his kind.

Today, Biden is 81 years old and he is running for re-election. Trumpism is anything but vanquished. And the Democratic Party no longer looks to be in transition. The Squad feels more like a faction than a future. Few think leadership of the party will smoothly pass to Vice President Harris. Polls have long shown Democrats aren’t enthusiastic about Biden running for re-election but he’s avoided any serious primary challenge or pressure to drop out.

The orderliness of the Democrats in the last few years stands in stark contrast to the chaos among Republicans. The G.O.P. has humiliated and deposed a string of House speakers and potential House speakers, run critics like Liz Cheney out of office and refused to admit Donald Trump lost the 2020 election. And now Republicans plan to nominate Trump again. That has been and continues to be a driver of Democratic unity.

“Donald Trump posed such a serious threat to so many Democrats that there was a strong desire both for stability and to win,” Ro Khanna, a Democratic congressman from Silicon Valley and co-chair of Sanders’s 2020 campaign, told me. “And that was at least as much a force or more of a force than the voices saying we need transformation.”

The cliché used to be that Democrats fell in love and Republicans fell in line. The reality, in recent years, has been that Democrats fall in line and Republicans fall apart. The Democratic Party’s establishment has held, even as the Republican Party’s establishment has buckled.


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