If Biden wins, the glow will fade fast

If Joe Biden wins the presidency, he’ll do it with a one-off coalition of liberal Democrats, moderates of both parties, Independents and one-time Trump voters. That coalition will be under severe stress from the moment a Biden victory becomes apparent.

The overwhelming desire to send President Trump packing has unified Biden’s Democratic party far more cohesively than in 2016, when liberals and moderates feuded right up to Election Day and 12% of Bernie Sanders supporters voted for Trump. Hillary Clinton lost in part because of tepid support and weak turnout from within her own party.

Democrats don’t want to make that mistake again, with Sanders and other so-called progressives actively campaigning for Biden. But if Biden wins, the Democratic party could quickly fracture and become the divided house it was during the primary elections, with leftists demanding revolution and moderates pushing for incremental improvements to the status quo.

The first battle would be over Biden’s cabinet, with progressives such as Reps. Ilhan Omar and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez pushing for a full slate of progressives. They’d like to see Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who favors tough new regulations on banks, as Treasury Secretary and Bernie Sanders as Labor Secretary. Progressives feel nobody with substantive business experience should lead a Cabinet department that regulates the industry they came from, even if that eliminates candidates with direct experience.

US Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) speaks to the press near a polling station during the New York primaries Election Day on June 23, 2020 in New York City. (Photo by Johannes EISELE / AFP) (Photo by JOHANNES EISELE/AFP via Getty Images)
US Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) speaks to the press near a polling station during the New York primaries Election Day on June 23, 2020 in New York City. (Photo by JOHANNES EISELE/AFP via Getty Images)

Biden won in the primaries by casting himself as a moderate who wouldn’t pillory the wealthy with punitive new taxes or regulate businesses into oblivion. But since then, he has wooed the left by adopting some of their policies, such as Elizabeth Warren’s minimum tax on large corporations and an aggressive target for eliminating carbon energy, similar to the goal of the Green New Deal. In June, a group known as the Biden-Sanders Unity Task Force outlined a long list of common goals liberals and moderates in the Democratic party supposedly share, including police reform, universal health care, better working class jobs and a muscular approach to controlling global warming.

This “unity” has worked for Biden as a candidate, allowing him to court Independents and pragmatic Republicans who blanch at big government programs such as Medicare for all or government control of the power sector. During the first presidential debate on Sept. 29, for instance, Trump called Biden a “radical” and a “socialist,” and Biden pointed out that Trump’s adjectives were more apt for Bernie Sanders. “I beat Bernie Sanders,” Biden swatted back. “I am the Democratic Party.” Biden also told viewers, “I don’t support the Green New Deal,” establishing clear distance between himself and the liberal Sanders wing of the party.