It was supposed to go so smoothly.
On Sunday afternoon โ as good patriotic Americans were doing literally anything else but following political drama out of Washington โ President Joe Biden artfully dropped the news that he wasnโt going to be seeking a second term, after all.
A few hours later, he officially endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris, seemingly precluding an ugly convention fight.
Except the two biggest names in Democratic politics not named Harris and Biden โ former President Barack Obama and former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi โ didnโt endorse Harris when they paid tribute to Bidenโs decision to withdraw.
And then, hours later, news broke that retiring independent Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia was so alarmed by the prospect of a Harris candidacy that he was considering rejoining the Democratic Party and challenging Kamala for the nomination.
So, yeah โ this is going just about as smoothly as literally everything else thatโs led to this moment.
โIt has been the greatest honor of my life to serve as your President,โ Biden said in the letter that seemingly was inevitably coming in the slow-motion car wreck thatโs unfolded since the debate from hell on June 27.
โAnd while it has been my intention to seek reelection, I believe it is in the best interest of my party and the country for me to stand down and to focus solely on fulfilling my duties as president for the remainder of my term,โ he said.
โ Joe Biden (@JoeBiden) July 21, 2024
A half-hour later, Biden officially endorsed Harris to take his place atop the ticket.
โMy very first decision as the party nominee in 2020 was to pick Kamala Harris as my Vice President. And itโs been the best decision Iโve made,โ he wrote.
โToday I want to offer my full support and endorsement for Kamala to be the nominee of our party this year. Democrats โ itโs time to come together and beat Trump. Letโs do this.โ
My fellow Democrats, I have decided not to accept the nomination and to focus all my energies on my duties as President for the remainder of my term. My very first decision as the party nominee in 2020 was to pick Kamala Harris as my Vice President. And itโs been the bestโฆ pic.twitter.com/x8DnvuImJV
โ Joe Biden (@JoeBiden) July 21, 2024
And while plenty of elected Democrats were ready to โdo thisโ โ inasmuch as to not โdo this,โ for them, would be tantamount to career suicide โ both Obama and Pelosi, who are beyond having to care about their ambitions and legacies, declined to do so in their statements.
And then there was, bless his wonderful heart, Joe Manchin.
The retiring West Virginia stalwart was almost the first senator to call on Biden to step aside after the June 27 debate. The independent, who left the Democratic Party in May over its leftward lurch, had to be persuaded not to appear on the Sunday morning political chat shows days later and step aside, The New York Times noted.
Manchin ended up formally calling on Biden to drop out just hours before the president did on Sunday.
โI came to the decision with a heavy heart that I think itโs time to pass the torch to a new generation,โ Manchin told host Jake Tapper on CNNโs โState of the Union.โ
โI want him to be the president in the last five months of this presidency of his term, to do what he can do is unite our country, to calm down the rhetoric and be able to focus attention to peace in the world,โ he said.
However, the quick shift to Harris was not exactly to his liking.
โSources close to Sen Joe Manchin, independent of WV, say heโs considering re-registering as a Democrat and throwing his hat into the ring,โ Tapper reported in a Sunday post on X.
Sources close to Sen Joe Manchin, independent of WV, say heโs considering re-registering as a Democrat and throwing his hat into the ring
โ Jake Tapper (@jaketapper) July 21, 2024
Why would the senator do so? Well, for one, he told Tapper he was โvery hopefulโ that the nominee would be chosen via an โopen process.โ
โI think that we have a lot of talent on the bench, a lot of good people,โ Manchin told Tapper.
โAnd Iโm partial to governors, because a governor canโt afford to be partial. They canโt afford to be partisan strictly because that pothole or that bridge doesnโt have a D or an R on it.โ
He also had his preferences.
โIโve got two tremendous governors right next door to me, Andy Beshear in Kentucky and Josh Shapiro in Pennsylvania, who are operating with legislatures either evenly split or completely opposite their party affiliation,โ Manchin said.
โThey havenโt divided their state. They havenโt made you pick a side and demonize the other side.โ
According to The Wall Street Journal, Shapiro has already endorsed Harris. Beshear hadnโt made it clear where he stands as of Sunday night, but the Kentucky governor is being mentioned in Harrisโ veepstakes, should she become the nominee. Getting into the race for the nomination would torpedo those ambitions.
And so, while Manchin isnโt a governor, he is a moderate and someone with a reputation as an infrastructure guru on Capitol Hill, often convincing Republicans to sign onto projects that, in all fairness, they probably shouldnโt have. (To be fair, he also has done a great deal to hold the line on spending when the Biden White House has tried to get him to go along with larded-up โinfrastructureโ deals that are little more than trillion-dollar boondoggles.)
Thus, again with no legacy left to prove, he could do what any sane person should: Make things as hard as possible for Kamala Harris to get the nomination.
Granted, Manchinโs role would likely be as a spoiler, not as a serious choice given the partyโs lurch to the left.
However, faced with another likely faction at the convention making things difficult for whoever gets nominated to stay grounded in reality โ the pro-Hamas activist leftists, who will, if they have their way, be partying like itโs 1968 in 2024 Chicago โ a moderate revolt could be enough to sink Harris.
Whether that means they would end up with someone more to Manchinโs liking (or, improbably, Manchin himself) or it would simply push Harris or another progressive nominee further into the arms of the partyโs far left remains to be seen.
However, anyone who thinks this drama is over has quite a few things coming, courtesy of one of the biggest flies in the Democratsโ ointment during the Biden administrationโs spending sprees.
This article appeared originally on The Western Journal.
The post Dissident Dem Senator Might Challenge Kamala Coronation, Fight Her for Nomination appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
Source: The Gateway Pundit
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