The vice president overstepped the boundaries of his office by putting President Obama in a politically sensitive situation.
I believe Joe Biden should go. He should not be
on the Democratic ticket in the fall.
Let me be clear that this is not about his
position on gay marriage. I support
gay marriage. I think President Obama
should support gay marriage.
But, from the perspective of how the presidency
should work, a vice president should never force the hand of a president on a
sensitive, first-order issue by getting out ahead publicly. This is true whether the issue is foreign
policy, defense policy, economic policy, or social policy.
Biden committed a governmental sin of the first
order. In any organization where the
leader can fire the second in command--whether a university, an NGO, a
corporation--Biden would have been asked to leave, if not immediately then before too long. Taking a controversial
position (however "inadvertent") outside the government, not inside, is a good
reason not to renew Biden's lease at the VP's house at the Naval Observatory in
Washington.
Having refused to defend the
Defense of Marriage Act and having done a excellent job of bringing "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" to an end, the president, in
a politically fraught year, had the
right to decide when and how to announce his support for gay marriage--and not
be forced to act by his vice president, looking weak and disorganized in the
process. (The reporting thus far does not suggest a Machiavellian two-step, with
Biden testing the waters having gained Obama's approval in advance.)
This latest, egregious Biden incident only points up the need discussed by many political commentators (
see
Bill Keller of the
Times, early in
the year) to
make Hillary Clinton the vice presidential nominee.
The vice presidential nominee has three core roles.
First,
to help the president get re-elected. I
think there is a consensus among political observers that Clinton, by
energizing key constituencies, would be a much more powerful vote-getter in key
states than Biden. In an election that is going to be extremely close, she clearly
could make the difference between victory and defeat for Obama--one of the rare
times that the vice presidential candidate could help swing an election. Biden was the nominee in 2008 because his
foreign policy experience (as chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee) complemented
Obama's fresh look. That is not true
today, and he has no political base. The rare importance of the VP nominee in helping
win a toss-up election has been illustrated recently by Robert Caro's detailed description of John Kennedy's
selection of Lyndon Johnson as his Vice Presidential nominee (
The Years of Lyndon Johnson: The Passage
of Power)
Second,
the vice president must be fully capable of being president
in the event of death or disability. Without arguing the point, let me just say that Clinton would meet this
test easily--and be better than Biden--with her long experience in the White
House, on the Hill and now running a major department.
Third,
since Jimmy Carter used Walter Mondale as a senior counselor, without any other
significant portfolio, the role of vice president has evolved into a position where the person is often last in
the room and gives the president unvarnished political and policy advice. Clinton would be at least the equal to Biden
on this dimension as well.
Despite the stories that Clinton wants to
leave government, I certainly think it likely
that, if asked by the president and if her presence on the ticket would make a real difference--especially with the possibility that the Republicans will control both houses
of Congress--she would accept. The
departure of Biden (to the State Department or some other position or home) could
also be orchestrated gracefully.
After
the last week, there can be little doubt
that this is a subject now being discussed with much intensity in some quarters of the White House.
This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2012/05/replace-joe-biden/257096/