Biden survived media’s failed revolt, now enjoy their pivot
When I was a desk officer in the State Department’s Bureau of African Affairs, I hated coup attempts: My phone never stopped ringing, round-the-clock task forces were organized, and bosses demanded endless reports because important people in Washington, DC, had become interested in countries they otherwise ignore.
The media’s coup attempt on President Biden, by contrast, has been more entertaining than those affairs, even if there are parallels between the president and various African leaders who survived coup plotters even more malicious and duplicitous than the American media.
Before the debate (BD), virtually every Democrat and most in the media assured us that Biden was totally up to the job.
But just moments into the AD (after debate) era, the dam broke and almost every media outlet and figure, even Biden superfan Joe Scarborough, turned on him.
The same gang who have been warning us about the threat to democracy posed by Donald Trump suddenly determined that the 14 million votes Biden got (87% of those cast) in the primary process (admittedly rigged in his favor) didn’t matter.
He needed to step down because they said so.
For a few days, it looked like the walls were closing in, as the talking heads would say in the Trump era.
But then, as with most coup attempts, the media-led insurrection fizzled.
Most Democratic politicians remained loyal to Biden, and polls revealed that other Democrats might fare even worse than the cognitively challenged president: Among men, Trump’s lead grew from 13 to 22 points — but Biden’s one-point advantage with women before the debate expanded to six points after it.
How has Biden survived the coup attempt? For starters, his poll numbers have dropped but haven’t fallen off a cliff: He retains strong support among seniors, women and African Americans.
Plenty of Democrats would still rather eat nails than vote for Donald Trump
Aside from a polarizing opponent and strong support from Democratic loyalists, Biden has been playing Big Man politics very effectively for decades in the same way that many of Africa’s worst tyrants have.
The late Robert Mugabe clung to power in Zimbabwe for 30 years until he was ousted in a ZANU-PF party-led coup at age 93, and Chad’s Idriss Deby likewise stayed in power for 30 years, surviving many coup attempts, until he was killed on the battlefield in 2021.
Equatorial Guinea’s Teodoro Obiang, age 82, and Cameroon’s Paul Biya, 91, have been in power since 1982, surviving many coup attempts, and refuse to leave.
Of course, being the president of a democratic country, Biden doesn’t have all the tools these authoritarian leaders have at their disposal: He can’t singlehandedly rig elections, shut down independent media, imprison enemies and terrorize the populace like a proper dictator.
And yet, repression wasn’t the key factor that enabled these dictators to survive coup attempts and cling to power.
Each was able to retain the loyalty of people who mattered — rank-and-file soldiers, party leaders, tribal elders and so on.
Biden has sagely done much the same during his five decades in politics.
The media has deserted him, but key Democrats and Democratic constituencies (unions, the Congressional Black Caucus) have not.
When I was the State Department’s desk officer for Chad, French diplomats made many overtures to Idriss Deby, offering significant incentives and soft-landing sinecures to try to convince him to retire.
He wasn’t interested, largely because he enjoyed being in power.
President Biden is the same: He thinks Trump is beatable (and he is) and doesn’t want to be a one-term president.
In the same way that Third World tyrants disregard public opinion, Biden brushes off polls showing that close to 80% of the country thinks he’s too old to be president. That’s not what our polls say, Jack!
US policymakers sometimes grow comfortable with aging dictators abroad and sometimes actively prop them up. They survey the likely successors if the dictators fall out of power and conclude that the alternatives are no better.
This is the same reason why most key Democrats are pulling a Tammy Wynette and standing by their man.
It’s unclear if prominent Democrats like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez grasp that many independent voters regard Democratic alternatives like Gavin Newsom, Kamala Harris, Pete Buttigieg and others as ineffectual, annoying or both.
But they can read the polls as well as anyone, and unless Democrats can convince Michelle Obama or Taylor Swift to run for president, Immemorial Joe may still be their best option.
The question now is: If their coup attempt fails completely, how will the media go back to shilling for Biden?
It seems like an impossible pivot, but somehow I’m confident that the same lying, dog-faced pony soldiers who told us the president was as sharp as a tack will return to business as usual.
That is to say, after a brief hiatus, they will go back to promoting the perceived interests of the Democratic Party, hoping that voters forget all the mean things they said about Joe Biden during the brief, heady days when it looked like the coup was on.
Dave Seminara is a writer, former diplomat and author of “Mad Travelers: A Tale of Wanderlust, Greed and the Quest to Reach the Ends of the Earth.” Adapted from City Journal.