Special counsel Robert Hur appears to have gotten what he was after with his final report on President Joe Biden’s handling of classified documents.
Hur, a former Trump-appointed U.S. attorney, claimed that Biden had “willfully retained and disclosed classified materials after his vice presidency when he was a private citizen,” but said the evidence was insufficient to establish guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. And the special counsel also differentiated Biden’s handling of documents from former President Donald Trump’s. But more than anything else, Hur’s ample commentary on Biden’s memory has become fodder for far-right — and not-so-far-right — media.
Which made for an interesting Thursday.
On the same day the Supreme Court appeared likely to ultimately rule that Trump can’t be disqualified from appearing on Colorado’s presidential ballot despite stoking the Jan. 6 riot, some people in the court of public opinion were suggesting that Biden had become disqualified himself — for supposed forgetfulness — or that his re-election campaign had sustained a near-fatal injury. Personally, I think that’s a damning portrayal of American politics: judicial failure and journalistic failure rolled into one.
Personally, I think that’s a damning portrayal of American politics: judicial failure and journalistic failure rolled into one.
Conservatives’ obsession with Biden’s age, which we also witnessed during the 2020 campaign, has always seemed desperate to me — particularly since Trump is less than four years younger. And I thought Chris Hayes was smart to note, during Thursday’s special coverage on MSNBC, that because age is unchangeable, attacks on Biden’s age are focused on something he can’t do anything about.
But the stakes of this presidential race are unchanged from what they were two days ago — I’d argue they’re unchanged from what they were four years ago.
To me, this election is primed to be a choice between a Republican Party…
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