| Right now, Hakeem Jeffries is the worst argument for the proposition that Hakeem Jeffries should be speaker of the House. His performance this week has been awful, bordering on complicit.
First, the man gave Trump credit for “securing the border.” Then, he praised Trump for pardoning corrupt Democratic Representative Henry Cuellar, who had been indicted on charges of accepting $600,000 in bribes. He wrapped things up by telling the press that they should not expect the Democrats to pursue impeachment charges against Secretary of War Crimes Pete Hegseth.
The country is crying out for leadership against the violent, racist, and corrupt Trump administration. The country is desperate for leaders who will fight Trump on every ground: political, economic, legal, and moral. And Jeffries spent a week doing press hits for the man. Literal silence would have been better than what Jeffries did this week.
The problem with Jeffries is that he wants to be the leader of the Democratic Party, and that is a very different job from being the leader of the opposition party. It’s the difference between waiting for your turn at the wheel versus trying to break the wheel. Jeffries is not a revolutionary or a reformer. He’s not an activist or crusader. He’s just a careerist. He’s carefully and competently positioned himself to be this close to getting a promotion, and he’s trying desperately not to screw that up.
Jeffries exposes the problem with the “leadership” of the entire Democratic Party: Their posture in the face of fascism is not one of insurgency or resistance but one of parliamentarian games and political stunts. They occasionally talk like they know Trump and MAGA are totalitarian threats to democratic self-government, but they don’t act like it. Instead, they act like Trump is a normal American president and can be defeated through normal political means. Democrats want people out in the streets shouting “no kings,” but Jeffries wouldn’t dare throw Trump’s tea in the water, and he’d support the prosecution of anybody who did.
The people, throughout history, who lead anti-authoritarian movements are people who are willing to be jailed for the cause. They’re people who are willing to be killed by the very regime they’re opposing. Hakeem Jeffries is not one of those people. He’s just the moderate guy at the politburo, trying to distinguish himself from the “hard-liners,” hoping he’ll get a chance when the old man kicks the bucket.
It might work. Jeffries might well get the promotion he’s angling for. I will spend most of next year arguing that Democrats must retake the House and, therefore, that Jeffries must be the next speaker of the House in order to put some restraint on the fascist president. But Democrats like Jeffries will never defeat Trump, because Democrats like Jeffries are not willing to challenge the system that produced him. They’re just waiting for their turn to be in charge of that system. |