The Democrats Are Having a False Reckoning Over Joe Biden
All this is being said here not to elicit sympathy for Joe Biden but to underscore a simple point: Undiscovered or left unaddressed, the things that ail us—people, systems, or institutions—will work their way to bone. And when they do, there are no straightforward treatments. There are no easy cures.
The Democratic Party is sick. Most Americans disapprove of it. Only 35 percent of Democrats are optimistic about the future of the party. In November, the Republican Party won its first presidential popular vote victory in 20 years. For the second time in the last decade, the GOP now has full control of the federal government. Its agenda is fascism.
There is faith among elected Democrats that the backlash to Trumpian misrule alone could deliver them at least the House in the midterms. That may well happen. But the Senate map will be difficult in 2026. It will be difficult in 2028. It will be difficult in 2030. It will be difficult, in fact, for the foreseeable future because Democrats are no longer competitive in conservative-leaning states, which the Senate is skewed to overrepresent, a problem that will only grow with population shifts over time. This is among the reasons why, beyond Washington, the Republican Party now fully controls government in 23 states to the Democratic Party's 15.
Since 2016 especially, there have been many deep and depressing conversations, covered and carried in this magazine, about how Democrats got here. The forces and factors weakening the party have been debated. Chins have been stroked red and raw over the constituencies the party has lost and how it might win them back. Historians, political scientists, political professionals, and journalists have all chimed in about how the party might be fixed, about what ought to be done and why. But within the last week, the political press seems to have settled easily upon the issue that evidently ought to be at front of mind for us all: The first and most significant problem facing the Democratic Party today, it seems, is that Joe Biden ran for reelection.
'A growing number of Democrats are publicly second-guessing their party's handling of the last election,' The Washington Post reports, 'acknowledging that President Joe Biden's delayed withdrawal was damaging and in some cases conceding they were too quick to dismiss questions about his age and mental acuity.' The Post's Megan McArdle is 'convinced that deep institutional soul-searching is due in many quarters, and that this conversation is too important to delay, even at the risk of adding to the Biden family's distress.' Van Jones believes that Democrats 'are going to pay for a long time for being a part of what is now being revealed to be a massive cover-up.'
On Friday, Politico's Adam Wren and Holly Otterbein put out a piece on 'the Biden question hanging over the 2028 field.' 'Joe Biden may have cost Democrats the White House in 2024,' it begins. 'Their inability to admit it, some Democrats fear, could hobble them in 2028.' The New York Times similarly tells us that influential Democrats have 'urged the party to publicly reckon with their long-running support of him.'
The 2024 election was more than half a year ago. Joe Biden dropped out of the 2024 race last July. Why, exactly, have the press and nervous Democrats returned to the subject of his run now, all of a sudden and all at once? On Monday, The Wall Street Journal reported that 'Biden dominated the national political conversation this past weekend,' adding that 'continued questions' about Biden's health and decision to run 'are emerging as both a major distraction and a litmus test for [the] party's leaders.' This is the kind of language that describes the trajectory of bullets in police shootings. 'Continued questions' from whom? 'Emerging' from where? Is it actually the case that Biden's health and decision to run 'dominated' political conversation across the country this weekend—more than, say, the price of goods or the current president's immigration policies? Have any polls been released to that effect?
Granted, it is almost a certainty that we'll get polls, very soon, showing that voters are thinking actively about Joe Biden again. And this is because political journalists want that to be the case. There's a book out on him, Jake Tapper and Alex Thompson's Original Sin, with new revelations on how infirm he was well before his reelection campaign began. He forgot names and faces, it tells us. There was talk about putting him in a wheelchair.
'A theme throughout the book is that people who had not seen Mr. Biden in person for a long time were shocked by his appearance when they did,' The New York Times' Reid Epstein wrote earlier this month. 'Former Representative Brian Higgins, a Democrat from New York, is quoted in the book as saying that Mr. Biden's possible cognitive decline 'was evident to most people that watched him.' David Morehouse, a former Democratic campaign aide turned hockey executive, said Mr. Biden 'was nothing but bones' after seeing him in a photo line in Philadelphia.'
What makes these accounts and the frenzy around them now so remarkable is that Biden's state was evident to anyone with eyes and ears. The American people might not have had the details, but they also didn't need them. It was obvious that his advancing years would make another campaign and term difficult—so obvious that it was raised as an issue more than five years ago, before his run in 2020, by Biden's critics to his left and the mainstream press alike. It was reported at the time that Biden's confidants did not want him to run for reelection if elected and did not believe he would. Once in office, he cruised into another campaign anyway before last June's debate brought everything to a grinding halt.
Or, at least it should have. Biden's campaign sputtered on for weeks after the debate, during which many of the voices that whispered their regrets to Tapper and Thompson—or are crying out publicly for a reckoning now—either said nothing or actively defended Biden's capacity to run. Why? Biden, they contend, held the party hostage. 'It is a long tradition for Washington bigwigs to use books to place the blame squarely on someone else,' Epstein wrote. 'What's unusual about this book is that just about all players who agreed to be interviewed—200, the authors wrote—pointed the finger at Mr. Biden and his small circle of senior aides.'
But this is both an oversimplification and a misdirection. Democratic leaders, insiders, and pundits did, ultimately, succeed in pushing Biden out of the race and clearly could have done so earlier—Biden and his circle were no match for most of the apparatus of the Democratic Party acting in concert. It was that apparatus, actually, that carried Biden to the White House as the Democratic nominee in the first place, as party leaders and candidates—again, belatedly—coalesced to put Biden, the unsatisfying but safe choice in their eyes, firmly ahead of Bernie Sanders during the 2020 primary. They swallowed the risk of Biden's age to do so, assuming a second run was out of the picture.
That collective decision to rescue and elevate Biden has to be among the reasons they were hesitant to call him to step aside early on, even as it became clearer that he was serious about reelection—a movement to discard Biden early in his term would have underscored the cynicism of propping him up temporarily as a placeholder. There were other reasons—the fear of a chaotic change-up or primary damaging the party's chances against Trump, yes—but also the fear, among Democrats looking out for themselves, of having made an enemy of Biden in the event that he actually won reelection.
All told, Biden was able to pursue another campaign out of Democratic deference, careerism, and complacency. There was no spell he cast over the party; nothing he himself did to stupefy and paralyze its leaders. Up and down the ladder, the shrewd and the merely timid, all of whom knew full well that he shouldn't run again, each took measure of the situation and figured it was safest to do nothing until doing nothing became untenable—and for several weeks afterward.
Prominent Democrats speaking out about all this a year ago would have been meaningful. Today, it means nothing. Denouncing Biden's run now that he's a political nonentity—out of office and perhaps very near death—isn't taking a brave stand against the internal culture of the Democratic Party. It's a reflection of it: a wholly cost-free and substantively empty way for opportunists to perform independence from the party now that the coast is clear and there are no toes of consequence to step on. Biden ran again, and is being condemned for running again, for the very same reasons.
To suggest otherwise is to misunderstand both the nature of the Democratic Party and the nature of political courage. 'The Biden recriminations could provide an opportunity for Democrats countering party orthodoxy on the issue,' Wren and Otterbein wrote in their piece: 'In the same way Barack Obama gained credibility with some Democratic primary voters in 2008 by having opposed the Iraq War long before his party consensus shifted, some Democrats think a willingness to break from the field on Biden could open the door to an outsider candidate.'
It's a revealing comparison. Speaking out against Biden's reelection campaign, as a matter of substance, is obviously nothing like having spoken out against the Iraq War. But even beyond that, the reason why Obama's opposition to the war resonated to begin with is that he thought the war was a mistake from the outset and said so publicly when it was politically risky to do so—not just in hindsight like his opponents in that race, who had to explain themselves. It was almost exactly the opposite of what Democratic candidates are being urged to do now. Voters will be able to tell the difference.
Party hopefuls looking for ways to mark themselves as different from the rest of the pack today have other, better options. The best way to demonstrate a measure of real independence from the Democratic Party is to tell the truth about what really ails it: wealthy, clueless donors; an approach to public policy incommensurate with the scale of the challenges the country faces; a quasi-religious faith in the virtues of bipartisanship; a related and willful blindness to the depths of the Republican rot beyond Donald Trump; and a blindness, just as consequential, to the structural features of our federal system that will continue pulling governance to the right. All are much deeper problems than Joe Biden's ego and those who chose to flatter it. All will be much more difficult to resolve. But if Democrats are looking for a reckoning, there are quite a few to be had in that mix.
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Washington Post
a minute ago
- Washington Post
The White House is making the homeless crisis worse
Jacob Fuller is an organizer and policy writer based in Philadelphia. In asserting control over the D.C. police force and deploying National Guard troops and federal agents, President Donald Trump has named removing homeless encampments as a top priority. If only he brought this level of urgency to preventing people from becoming homeless in the first place. Over the past decade, the number of homeless individuals has increased each year, at a rate that has only accelerated. Last year, rates jumped by 18 percent, totaling 771,480 unhoused individuals in the United States. And the situation is likely to get worse before it gets better. Cuts to health care and food programs, soaring housing costs, and newer proposals by the Trump administration to pare back housing assistance all threaten to worsen homelessness — not just in Washington, but around the country. For most individuals and families, homelessness is a temporary situation — typically resolved within weeks or days. Programs to prevent and quickly resolve housing crises matter, as prolonged experiences with homelessness can make individual cases even harder to address. Homelessness in the United States might feel like an intractable problem, but it has not always been on an upward trajectory. Following the 2008 financial crash that led to mass unemployment and housing insecurity, President Barack Obama signed the Homeless Emergency Assistance and Rapid Transition to Housing Act into law. Among its many features, it authorized $2.2 billion for programs focused on quickly putting people back into homes and keeping at-risk people from sliding into homelessness in the first place. The economy was hit hard by the recession, but from 2010 to 2016, homelessness decreased yearly, ultimately achieving a 15 percent reduction nationally, with veteran homelessness cut in half. Federally backed housing initiatives were widely credited with helping drive the trend. These gains were already fragile and contingent on appropriate funding levels for effective programs, but the spread of covid-19 kicked the problem into high gear. As housing costs skyrocketed and inflation soared, rates of homelessness followed, especially as pandemic-era aid ran out. Housing costs remain at record levels, and rates of consumer debt have soared, cutting the ability of millions to save money for a crisis. Now, only months into the second Trump administration, what was already a crisis shows signs of developing into a total calamity. In budget recommendations for 2026, the Department of Housing and Urban Development proposed slashing federal rental assistance by 40 percent, functionally eliminating voucher programs and a two-year time limit on federal rental assistance, putting as many as 1.4 million Americans at risk of losing their homes. In my conversations with experts working in homeless services across the nation, it's clear we are shockingly unprepared for what's coming. 'Right now, we're in pretty terrifying times in terms of not knowing what's going to happen to our federal grants,' said Haven Wheelock, a harm-reduction manager at the Oregon-based nonprofit Outside In. And though the state's funding might theoretically help fill in the gaps, its legislature is bracing for cuts to Medicaid that will further strain budgets. Some of these changes might not show up in federal statistics at first glance. According to Dennis Culhane, professor of social policy at the University of Pennsylvania, a large degree of the observed 2024 increase in homelessness was driven by Republican governors shipping migrants to sanctuary cities that moved them into homeless shelters before they could be transitioned to other housing. With the migrant crisis receding, he predicted, those numbers will drop. But chronic homelessness — extended periods of homelessness typically defined as lasting a year or longer — has gone up significantly and is more at risk. From 2020 to 2024, the number of individuals experiencing chronic homelessness increased by 38 percent, and getting them back into homes is significantly harder than resolving temporary or at-risk cases. Prolonged homelessness can often lead to drug use, which prevents access to services that require sobriety to qualify and increases the likelihood of traumatic brain injuries that could impact an individual's ability to receive care. Though these measures would probably devastate individuals at risk of homelessness, they would also be catastrophic to the communities where they live. In cities, homelessness has been shown to contribute to decreased foot traffic to downtown areas where it's perceived to be high, might decrease ridership of public transportation, and can threaten public health and safety. People in cities know what it's like to see a sudden increase in people experiencing mental health and substance crises, and how even small numbers of unhoused people can change the perception of a neighborhood. 'When they begin self-medicating, they begin this cycle where they may end up in an unstable space, both mentally and environmentally, [and] that will negatively impact the entire community as a whole,' said Sarah Laurel, executive director at Philadelphia-based nonprofit Savage Sisters. She expressed concern for those currently in her recovery program because getting kicked off Medicaid will mean many might go without crucial medication. We don't have to let this happen — even modest investments can help make a difference. New visions such as the pro-housing 'abundance' movement, as well as a rise in candidates making affordability a central issue, present possibilities for a brighter future with more accessible routes to renting or owning a home. But investment in new and affordable housing is only one part of the picture. To help ensure that individuals who find themselves displaced can quickly bounce back, government assistance programs such as 'housing first' strategies, rental aid and vouchers must be renewed and expanded.


Vox
a minute ago
- Vox
Republicans are making a very simple, unforced mistake with Latino voters
is a correspondent at Vox, where he covers the Democratic Party. He joined Vox in 2022 after reporting on national and international politics for the Atlantic's politics, global, and ideas teams, including the role of Latino voters in the 2020 election. A boy holds a flag a peaceful protest and vigil where six workers were taken by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement on June 18, 2025, in Pasadena, all the talk of a new, lasting multiracial coalition that helped elect Donald Trump, there are clues that this support may be wavering, particularly among Latino voters. Polls show the president's approval rating with this group has plummeted since the last election, and a third of Latinos who voted for him say they are unlikely to back a Republican candidate in the next one. This collapse happened for a few reasons. Latino voters are not only souring on the president generally, but also on his handling of key issues like immigration and the economy — the very topics that boosted his support with them initially. And curiously, this decline in support for the president isn't translating into a surge for Democrats. Instead, many Latino voters express dissatisfaction with both parties. Today, Explained Understand the world with a daily explainer, plus the most compelling stories of the day. Email (required) Sign Up By submitting your email, you agree to our Terms and Privacy Notice . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. This shifting dynamic suggests that both parties have been operating on flawed assumptions over the last few years. Democrats made the mistake of treating Latinos as a monolithic group, focusing on social justice issues while failing to address economic concerns that were pushing these voters toward the GOP. Now, Republicans may be poised to make a similar mistake. They have largely viewed these voters as Republicans-in-waiting, banking on a rightward drift that they assume extends to the most extreme parts of the conservative social agenda. This approach risks alienating a large segment of the Latino electorate. Ultimately, both parties are learning a crucial lesson: Demographics aren't destiny, and they need a more nuanced understanding of this diverse and rapidly changing group of voters. The Democrats' shrinking Latino majority Over the last decade, Trump has remade the American electorate with the help of Latino voters. Back in 2016, his highly racialized and polarizing election victory resulted in one of the worst performances with Latino voters in modern history, winning fewer than three in 10 Hispanic and Latino voters, well below average for Republican candidates. But splits began to develop among Latino communities in the US over the next few years. Working class, non-college educated, and male Latinos, as well as those from Florida and the Southwest, began to drift away from Democrats, particularly at the national level. They were more intrigued by Republican pitches centered around the economy, small business growth, and affordability. At the same time, Democrats were hesitant to admit they had an issue with the Latino population, quibbling over messaging and campaign investments while missing the plot. By the time of the 2020 election, Trump had managed to not just recover his party's losses in 2016, but expand on them, shrinking the Democratic advantage with Latinos by nearly 20 points. Democrats, it turns out, misread Latino voters' priorities and beliefs, gradually losing support from the peak they had from 2012 to 2016 (when Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton enjoyed 40-point margins). The party largely approached Latinos as 'voters of color,' marginalized minorities who could be mobilized through appeals to identity, immigrant solidarity, and social justice. For some time, this worked, but Latinos weren't behaving like a monolithic group. Instead, Latinos would fracture and become more dissimilar during this time, with various kinds of evangelicals, border residents, naturalized immigrants, and working class Latinos remaining or becoming more conservative as the Democratic Party and its white, college-educated base became more progressive. Particularly on issues like crime, immigration and the border, and gender roles and identity, the liberal positions that Democrats took — or were portrayed to take — were out of step with the views of many conservative and moderate Latinos from 2020 to 2024. In 2021, the Pew Research Center found that the most liberal, educated, and politically engaged Democrats exerted outsized influence on their party. By the 2024 election, this created an opening for Republicans, as Latino voters expressed greater openness to Trump and the GOP's stances on the economy, immigration, and abortion. By then, their votes had begun to follow some of their beliefs. Republican gains came quickly As Democrats stumbled, Republicans stuck to a different approach: treating Latinos as a new kind of white voter. They doubled down on a hawkish and xenophobic immigration message that seemed to resonate with a large minority of Latinos, spoke of the border as an issue of crime and public safety, and talked nonstop about prices and affordability to exploit the lack of trust in Democrats' stewardship of the economy. Republicans sought to make the old Reagan line that, 'Hispanics are conservatives, [but] they just don't know it yet,' come true by hammering home the idea that Kamala Harris and the Democratic Party were too radical and out of touch. This approach worked. Latinos concerned with immigration and the economy shifted to Republicans, and Trump posted a double-digit boost in support among Latinos, shrinking the Democratic advantage another 20 points. Continued Latino support is not a given An array of data suggest that this advantage is looking more short-lived, largely because Republicans aren't taking into account the nuances of Latino voters. The GOP still did not win a majority of Latinos last year — and much of the boost was from disaffected Democrats or more moderate, disengaged Latinos who don't have the same strong ideological leanings as the primarily white MAGA base. Latino voters are rapidly changing, existing as both a racial minority and an assimilating, formerly immigrant generation. The most recent evidence for this divergence comes from two research projects undertaken by the Democratic-aligned Equis Research group. In the spring, they tracked growing dissatisfaction among Latino voters with Trump's handling of the economy, cost of living, and immigration. Even among what Equis calls 'Biden defectors,' those former Democrats who switched to supporting Trump in 2024, a slight majority were beginning to turn on Trump's economic policies. This dynamic extended to immigration, where an overwhelming majority of all Latino voters thought the administration's actions were 'going too far and targeting the types of immigrants who strengthen our nation.' Some 36 percent of Trump-voting Latinos said the same thing, and a majority of Biden defectors, some 64 percent, felt the same way. This suggests some degree of remaining immigrant solidarity among these swingier, evolving segments of the Latino electorate and disapproval over how mass deportations and aggressive anti-immigrant policies will affect law-abiding immigrants and their families. Nearly two-thirds of Latinos in Equis' polling believe that the Trump administration's actions 'will make it difficult for hardworking Latinos to feel safe, by increasing racial profiling and harassing all Latinos regardless of immigration status.' In other words, there is a limit to what various kinds of Latino voters are willing to stomach. The same dynamic is becoming more clear with regards to the economy, where Latino voters, and new Trump voters specifically, are unhappy with the state of the economy. Biden defectors, Equis finds, are net negative on Trump's economic policies: -6 percent of support in May and -8 percent in July. Whether this dynamic not only hurts the GOP but also helps Democrats is unclear. Although many Latino voters still believe Republicans favor the wealthy over the working class, this long-standing sentiment is no longer pushing them toward the Democratic Party. Instead, they increasingly distrust both parties on this question. But together, these signs suggest that the GOP is going too far with their policy and ideological mission in Trump's second term, turning off the new converts they won to their coalition over the last 10 years. Where the parties go from here The two major parties are making errors with Latino voters. Both have to moderate their policy and ideological approaches while bringing more nuance to how they campaign. Latinos do have some things that bind them together, and they are not just like white voters who can ignore discrimination and scapegoating and uprooting of their extended community's lives (as immigration enforcement is showing). At the same time, they need to be talked to with more nuance. Democrats tried to do this in 2024, moderating on immigration, dropping the usage of the term 'Latinx,' and investing in hyper-specific, hyper-local campaigning with various kinds of Mexican Americans, Cuban Americans, Puerto Ricans, and others. But there was only so much campaigning they could do when facing a wave of anti-Biden, anti-incumbent electoral sentiment. Republicans, meanwhile, toned down immigration talk and zeroed in on subgroups of the Latino electorate in battleground states in 2020. They appealed to religious and ideological conservatives — Cuban, South American, and Puerto Rican communities in Florida, as well as border communities in Arizona, Nevada, and Texas. Some of this nuanced campaigning did carry over to 2024, but it focused more on young and male Latinos in general. And 2024 saw a return to a kind of dog-whistle, racialized, and anti-immigrant scapegoating, which helped the anti-incumbent tide.


Newsweek
a minute ago
- Newsweek
Texas Democrat Refuses To Leave Capitol Overnight in Redistricting Standoff
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A House Democrat has refused to leave the Texas Capitol overnight to protest the latest Republican move in the ongoing redistricting standoff. State representative Nicole Collier has said she will stay in the building until Wednesday to protest a Republican requirement forcing Democrats who fled the state to have police escorts to and from the House to ensure they turn up to vote. Why It Matters Earlier this month, Collier and 50 other Texas Democrats traveled to Illinois, New York and Massachusetts to stop a vote on a new redistricted map, drawn up by the Republican Party and thought to favor the GOP's chances in upcoming elections. The Democrats accused the GOP of gerrymandering, and the GOP in turn called out the Democrats for disrupting the passage of legislation. After two weeks of fighting, which included legal threats and the issuing of arrest warrants, the Democrats returned to the House for a session that ended without a vote on the redistricting bill. A plainclothes state trooper, center, shadows Texas state Representative Toni Rose as she shows her permission slip to the media and prepares to leave the House Chamber in Austin, Texas, on August 18. A plainclothes state trooper, center, shadows Texas state Representative Toni Rose as she shows her permission slip to the media and prepares to leave the House Chamber in Austin, Texas, on August 18. AP Photo/Eric Gay What To Know Upon Democrats' return to the state Capitol, speaker Dustin Burrows said they could leave the House floor only with written permission and if they agreed to be under the custody of a law enforcement officer until the House's next meeting on Wednesday. Collier refused to participate in this arrangement and was not allowed to leave the House floor without an escort. On X, an account for the Texas House Democratic Caucus began a livestream on Monday night showing Collier in the House. Representative Gene Wu, the chair of the Texas House Democratic Caucus, posted a photo on X showing food items Collier had with her, which included dried peaches, popcorn and instant noodles. Thank you for all who are watching the @TexasHDC livestream. @NicoleCollier95 & I have snacks! For those asking, the livestream does not have audio. #txlege — Gene Wu (@GeneforTexas) August 19, 2025 What People Are Saying State representative Nicole Collier said in a statement: "I refuse to sign away my dignity as a duly elected representative just so Republicans can control my movements and monitor me with police escorts." U.S. Representative Jasmine Crockett, a Democrat from Texas, wrote on social media: "As a former Texas State Rep, let me be clear: LOCKING Rep. Nicole Collier inside the chamber is beyond outrageous. Forcing elected officials to sign 'permission slips' & take police escorts to leave? That's not procedure. That's some old Jim Crow playbook." She added: "Texas Republicans have lost their damn minds." Representative Gene Wu, the chair of the Texas House Democratic Caucus, said in a statement: "We killed the corrupt special session, withstood unprecedented surveillance and intimidation and rallied Democrats nationwide to join this existential fight for fair representation—reshaping the entire 2026 landscape." Gary Bledsoe, the president of the Texas NAACP, said in a statement: "The quorum was made, so her constitutional action in representing her district cannot now provide the basis for her detention." Texas House Speaker Dustin Burrows said: "Members who have not been present until today, for whom arrest warrants were issued, will be granted written permission to leave only after agreeing to be released into the custody of a designated DPS officer appointment." What Happens Next As Texas' redistricting plans proceed, similar measures are brewing in other Republican states. The U.S. Supreme Court is reviewing a dispute over redistricting in Louisiana and earlier this year overturned a lower court decision that ruled South Carolina's congressional map was unconstitutional. California Governor Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, has said he will retaliate against Republican redistricting efforts by redistricting the Golden State to favor his party.