Notice: Function _load_textdomain_just_in_time was called incorrectly. Translation loading for the powerpress domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /var/www/alternc/s/solidarityus/www/solidarityus.org/site01/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114
Our Biden Problem – Solidarity

Our Biden Problem

Barbara Ransby

Posted October 2, 2020

One major party’s candidate is arguably a racist old-school misogynist, and the other is Donald Trump. What’s a leftist to do? (Design by Rachel K. Dooley / Photo via Getty Images)

This is a hard arti­cle to write. I wish our polit­i­cal land­scape were so much dif­fer­ent than it is, and I wish our polit­i­cal choic­es were bet­ter than they are.

To say Joe Biden is not an ide­al pres­i­den­tial can­di­date — for the Left or for Black peo­ple — is an under­state­ment. Of the myr­i­ad hope­fuls crowd­ing the debate stage at the begin­ning of the Demo­c­ra­t­ic pri­maries, Biden is close to the worst. Recall Biden’s role in draft­ing and pass­ing the heinous 1994 crime bill, which con­tributed might­i­ly to the scourge of mass incar­cer­a­tion. Con­sid­er his dis­re­spect­ful and demean­ing treat­ment of Ani­ta Hill at Clarence Thomas’ Supreme Court con­fir­ma­tion. Con­sid­er his lead­er­ship in plung­ing the U.S. into the bloody and unnec­es­sary war in Iraq. Con­sid­er the inap­pro­pri­ate hug­ging and hair sniff­ing and Tara Reade’s cred­i­ble and dis­turb­ing allegations.

Biden’s recent behav­ior digs him into a deep­er hole. Speak­ing at a Black church in Wilm­ing­ton, Del., ear­li­er this month, Biden’s response to the mas­sive protests over police killings of Black peo­ple was to sug­gest that police learn to ​“shoot ​‘em in the leg instead of in the heart.” He lat­er rolled out a list of pro­posed reforms made up of over­sight and train­ing mea­sures focused on root­ing out ​“bad cops” that fell far short of the defund­ing of police depart­ments called for by the Move­ment for Black Lives.

In a dis­as­trous per­for­mance in May on the syn­di­cat­ed ​“Break­fast Club” radio pro­gram, Biden told the Black host, Char­la­m­agne tha God, ​“If you have a prob­lem fig­ur­ing out whether you’re for me or Trump, then you ain’t Black.” The lev­el of arro­gance is breath­tak­ing: Biden is both tak­ing the Black vote for grant­ed (again) while appoint­ing him­self the arbiter of Black­ness; invok­ing (his notion of) Black ver­nac­u­lar adds insult to injury. A pre­sump­tu­ous, erro­neous and offen­sive notion that Biden has some kind of polit­i­cal inti­ma­cy with Black peo­ple has become an under­ly­ing mes­sage of his campaign. 

That said, if Biden is nobody’s dream, Trump is a night­mare. We know a sec­ond term of Trump will inflict enor­mous repres­sion, suf­fer­ing and death. So we face a dilem­ma: We can­not be cheer­lead­ers and apol­o­gists for neolib­er­al politi­cians like Biden, but we can­not endure four more years of Trump. Do we hold our noses yet again and sup­port a can­di­date so gross­ly out of sync with our val­ues, or do we sit on the side­lines and let an aspir­ing fas­cist hold power?

Four more years, I fear, would be a no-holds-barred grasp for the throne. GOP lead­ers are such spine­less and oppor­tunist syco­phants that they will tol­er­ate any­thing to main­tain prox­im­i­ty to the tyrant’s pow­er, or at least avoid his ire. Cou­pled with Trump’s reck­less incom­pe­tence and con­tempt for both demo­c­ra­t­ic prac­tices and the suf­fer­ing of human beings, we can visu­al­ize a cat­a­stro­phe far beyond what we have wit­nessed thus far.

We do have a choice in Novem­ber, though it’s not good. The best option this time (unless you live in a very safe Demo­c­ra­t­ic state) is not to cast a sym­bol­ic third-par­ty vote. We have to, as polit­i­cal sci­en­tist Cathy Cohen puts it, ​“vote against Trump and orga­nize against Biden.” Even if Trump is oust­ed, we need to fight Trump­ism in all man­i­fes­ta­tions while chal­leng­ing Biden’s neolib­er­al poli­cies. This is about dam­age con­trol pol­i­tics, not to be con­fused with a Biden endorsement.

Con­ven­tion­al polit­i­cal wis­dom sug­gests we should mute our cri­tiques of Biden, that a blunt, crit­i­cal assess­ment of Biden will only help Trump. But I dis­agree. Peo­ple see through hypocrisy and are tired of it. Per­haps being hon­est about what we are ask­ing peo­ple to do will actu­al­ly bring more to the polls and get them involved in post-elec­tion activism. We are not vot­ing for a sav­ior — quite the con­trary. In fact, despite the the­atrics, pres­i­den­tial elec­tions are nev­er about sav­iors. As Rachel Gilmer of the Dream Defend­ers often says, elec­toral pol­i­tics, for the Left, is about choos­ing our oppo­nents in the next round of strug­gle. We have to orga­nize our com­mu­ni­ties under a ​“Dump Trump­ism” ban­ner — through vot­er edu­ca­tion, fight­ing for safe and acces­si­ble vot­ing by mail, vir­tu­al door knock­ing and mobi­liz­ing in key states.

But here is anoth­er incon­ve­nient truth. Vot­ing, though nec­es­sary, is insuf­fi­cient. Those who came before us did not fight and die sim­ply so we could vote; they fought and died so we could live in a more just world. That world will not occur with­in the bounds of racial cap­i­tal­ism; that marks the big­ger project. Mean­while, we have to vote — and organize.

We have to build social move­ment orga­ni­za­tions and coali­tions, rein­vig­o­rate our labor unions, protest in the streets and lob­by local offi­cials, and strug­gle for fun­da­men­tal and sys­temic change on mul­ti­ple fronts. Arund­hati Roy urges us to see this moment of cri­sis as a por­tal to a new soci­ety and ​“be pre­pared to fight for it.” Defeat­ing Trump and Trump­ism is only the beginning.

Bar­bara Rans­by is a pro­fes­sor of his­to­ry at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Illi­nois-Chica­go and the author of Ella Bak­er and the Black Free­dom Move­ment: A Rad­i­cal Demo­c­ra­t­ic Vision. She is a long­time activist and a founder of the group Ella’s Daughters.

This arti­cle is reprint­ed from In These Times mag­a­zine, © 2020, and is avail­able at inthe​se​times​.com.

Comments

One response to “Our Biden Problem”

  1. robert clarke Avatar
    robert clarke

    Why don’t you just join the communist party and be done with it.