The past two months have been politically chaotic. I predicted the Democrats scheduled the June 27 presidential debate between Trump and Biden historically early to expose Biden’s senility to the world. They knew he couldn’t beat Trump at the polls, so they needed to replace him before the Democratic National Convention.
The media buzzed with speculation about who would replace Biden on the ticket. Michigan Gov. Whitmer, California Gov. Newsom, and Illinois Gov. Pritzker were names at the forefront.
There was much discussion about avoiding Kamala Harris as the nominee, given her widespread unpopularity. She has Biden’s clarity, Hillary Clinton’s charm and the infamous “Kamala cackle.”
Back in the 2019 Democratic primaries, then Sen. Harris performed so poorly that she dropped out before winning a single delegate, even before the Iowa caucus. She ran openly on her San Francisco progressive credentials, so her failure was inevitable.
Her voting record made her the second-most liberal Democratic senator of the 21st century. She’s on record to abolish ICE (which she compared to the KKK), allow felons like the Boston Marathon bomber to vote, ban fracking, defund the police, provide taxpayer-funded health care to illegals, ban private health insurance, and have a mandatory gun buy-back program.
The Democrats were desperate to replace Biden with anyone but Kamala, but they were stuck with her, not just because she was vice president, but because she was Biden’s DEI choice. You can’t simply replace a DEI hire, no matter how incompetent and disliked she is.
Then came the assassination attempt on Trump on July 13. The image of Trump, fist in the air in defiance, was the final nail in Biden’s coffin.
A week later, it was clear to the world that Biden couldn’t win reelection. But how to make him concede, especially since he said only an “act of God” would stop his 2024 run? Was the attempted assassination the sign Biden needed? Or perhaps pressure from top Democrats? Or the threat of invoking the 25th Amendment.
While the Democratic Party claims to champion democracy, their actions speak otherwise. They’ve maneuvered to keep Jill Stein and RFK Jr. off state ballots, just as they used superdelegates in 2016 to secure Hillary’s nomination over Bernie Sanders. Now, Kamala, Obama, Pelosi and Schumer pressured Biden to step aside, despite his 87% primary win, installing Kamala without a single vote. That’s called a coup.
On July 21, Biden finally relented, announcing on Twitter/X that he wouldn’t run for reelection, endorsing her in a separate tweet, declaring her his heir apparent. It doesn’t work that way. Despite Biden’s mental decline preventing him from running for office or announcing his decision on live TV, he’s apparently fine to remain president until January.
The media is scrambling to rebrand Kamala. First, they must hide her policies and voting record as a California senator. Then, they need to gaslight the Biden-Harris dismal track record over the last three years:
The same people now praising Kamala were telling us Biden was “sharp as a tack” just two months ago.
At her rallies, Kamala is pledging to fix the very problems she and Biden created over the last four years. She promises to tackle inflation on Day 1. Why didn’t she address it 3½ years ago? Oh, that’s right — she cast the tie-breaking votes for $5.6 trillion in new spending on the American Rescue Plan, Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, Build Back Better Act and Inflation Reduction Act — including hiring 87,000 IRS agents to track down tips in the hospitality industry, which she now wants to exempt from taxation.
Now, Kamala proposes price controls. Even the uber-liberal Washington Post quipped: “When your opponent calls you ‘communist,’ maybe don’t propose price controls?”
Our nation is sitting at a precipice. We already know how both presidential candidates will govern if reelected. Choose wisely.
Courtney served 20 years as a nuclear engineering officer aboard submarines and 15 years as a graduate school instructor. A political independent, he spends his time chasing his eight grandchildren around Moscow.