Summary
President Biden expressed regret over appointing Merrick Garland as Attorney General, criticizing Garland’s slow action in prosecuting Donald Trump for the January 6 insurrection while aggressively pursuing cases against Hunter Biden.
Biden reportedly blamed former Chief of Staff Ron Klain for persuading him to choose Garland over other candidates, such as Doug Jones, who was seen as more politically assertive.
Many Democrats share Biden’s frustration, believing Garland’s cautious approach harmed efforts to hold Trump accountable.
This is all well and good but I don’t see any changes happening and I don’t see any lessons being learned.
We voted for Biden, not Garland. Advisors can push him whatever way they want but at the end of the day it’s his call. And voters have been sharing every frustration for the last decade or two at getting presidents that don’t actually push the real reforms people want.
IMHO, in Biden’s place, The smart thing to do would have been go full Bulworth mode the second he dropped out. If he cut the bullshit and started calling everybody out he could endorse a damp paper bag as his successor and they’d get votes.
People voted for Trump because he is a reform candidate. He may not be a reform President (he wasn’t the first time) but he talks a lot of reform on the stump.
Hillary was not a reform candidate. Kamala was not a reform candidate. Both lost.
If there is a lesson to be learned here, it’s that DNC needs to jettison a lot of the old guard that have been the face of the party for the last 50 years. Get some young people with energy and new ideas and put them in charge.
After the United CEO shooting, it would have been a great time for Democrats to put the public option back on the table. That should never have been dropped from Obamacare. But there is enough sentiment in favor of it that they could probably get it through, or at the very least make Republicans pay in the court of public opinion for stopping it. Yet another wasted opportunity.