| ◼ President Biden has challenged Donald Trump to debate him two times this fall, just in case he forgets the first time.
◼ After exchanging taunts online, Biden and Trump agreed to debate in June. Until there is official agreement on all the details—in fact, until the candidates are on the debate stage—any plans could fall through. But a series of presidential debates would be worthwhile. Biden is an elderly individual suffering from noticeable signs of decline, and there are serious doubts as to whether he is fit to serve a full second term. Trump, no spring chicken himself, skipped all the debates during the primaries and has not had to answer many questions about what kinds of policies he would pursue in a second term. Voters deserve to see both men stand up and take questions in an unscripted format in which each can be challenged by his opponent. Barring something extraordinary, either Trump or Biden will be president next year. Let them face each other, as they face the voters.
◼ Trump’s criminal trial in New York is drawing to a quicker-than-expected ending. Prosecutors announced that Michael Cohen, Trump’s former lawyer and bumbling “fixer,” is their final witness. Trump is unlikely to testify in his own defense. Manhattan district attorney Alvin Bragg clearly stripped the case down after porn star Stormy Daniels provided graphic testimony of a sexual encounter she claims to have had with Trump in 2006—inflammatory evidence that shed no light on the actual charges and that had Judge Juan Merchan deriding prosecutors for doing what he had green-lighted. Cohen is a loathsome figure, but that could cut both ways with the jury, loathsomeness being what made him useful to Trump for over a decade. Legally, the case is weak. The falsity of Trump’s business records is debatable, with Bragg betting heavily on the say-so of Cohen, a convicted perjurer. Even if one stipulates that the records are false, Bragg still needs to prove fraudulent intent that includes covering up a second crime—which Bragg suggests is conspiracy to violate federal campaign laws. The proof on those elements is scant, and it is a due-process affront that we’re still guessing on the second crime. Still, juries tend to take their cues from the judge, and Merchan’s pro-prosecution bias is barely contained.
◼ Admit it, when you read the New York Times scoop about Robert F. Kennedy Jr. surviving a bout with a parasitic worm that had eaten a portion of his brain, you were both surprised and not surprised. Suddenly Kennedy’s wackier statements didn’t seem quite so wacky. The Times also reported that he had suffered a bout of mercury poisoning. It’s good that Kennedy believes he isn’t having any memory loss or other lingering effects, but it’s not good that his campaign refused to turn over medical records and that no major candidate has released medical records so far this cycle. In February, President Biden released a “summary” of his most recent medical tests but not his records; in November, former president Donald Trump released a three-paragraph letter from his doctor declaring that he was in “excellent health.” In both the 2000 and 2008 cycles, John McCain released his medical records, recognizing that the public needed reassurance given his advanced age. McCain was 71 in 2008. Kennedy turned 70 in January. Trump turns 78 in June, and Biden turns 82 shortly after the election. Jill Stein turns 75 this month, and Cornel West turns 71 in June. All these candidates ought to release their records or, at a minimum, allow a medical correspondent to review and summarize them.
◼ In 2016, Trump broke with precedent by releasing a list of potential Supreme Court picks. It was key to persuading skeptical conservatives who provided the margin of his victory. It was also a healthy move for democratic transparency in light of the outsized role the Court plays today. It is ultimately the voters who are responsible for preserving our Constitution, and they deserve to know what sort of hands they will be leaving it in. Judicial nominations were perhaps the greatest success story of Trump’s first term, pursued without the chaos that attended other Trump efforts and unifying the disparate factions of the party. Judges were a winning issue for Republican Senate candidates in 2018 and 2020. Yet, throughout the 2024 primaries, Trump and his campaign were oddly quiet about the judiciary, as Trump seemed content to rest on his laurels while rumors swirled that he was breaking with legal conservatives and was dissatisfied that the courts had not been more solicitous of his false election-fraud claims and demands for immunity from prosecution. In mid March, Trump said he would release another judges list. If he wants to win and govern effectively, he should follow through on the promise. |