As quickly as he was swept in by Super Tuesday, the remorse will begin when he is the only candidate.
They could plan everything, but the onset of Joe’s dementia.
In 2016, if you recall, Hilary was the “hidden candidate”, eyes rolling and stumbling around she was thrust into a waiting vehicle more than once, while Trump orated to crowds of thousands. Hillary invented NOT campaigning for the presidency.
There will be great dismay in the Democrats when they wake from their stupor and find they are left with Joe. Anything can happen at the convention, and will. (Except the Wookie, of course. I don’t know how it keeps coming up that America is going to accept the first woman president on the qualification that she was someone’s “wife”. It’s idiotic.)
“Hillary invented NOT campaigning for the presidency.”
Not even close.
The Front Porch, or Non-Campaign Campaign, is an old and honored tradition in American politics.
The successful presidential campaigns of James A. Garfield in 1880, Benjamin Harrison in 1888, and William McKinley in 1896 are perhaps the best-known front porch campaigns.
McKinley spoke to over 700,000 people from his front porch while his opponent, William Jennings Bryan, gave over 600 speeches across the country.
Warren Harding used the front porch campaign style successfully in 1920.
Jeff Sessions used a front porch style campaign during his 2008 Senate re-nomination race.