Tuesday, February 16, 2021

2021: The Year Of Incompetence?

If 2020 was the year of the dumpster fire, I'm beginning to wonder if 2021 won't be quite so bad, mainly because things are shaping up where the people who are trying to make things bad for us in the plebs are incompetent. Let's take a few current events, the Trump "impeachment", the TJ Ducklo "resignatiom", and Gavin Newsom.

It's hard to figure out just what the Democrats and a few Republicans had in mind with trying to "impeach" a president who'd already been voted out, who was completely out of the government at the time the "trial" occurred, and over which the chief justice, presumably an authority on its constitutionality, apparently declined to preside. The foreordained result was acquittal, which surprised no one but Speaker Pelosi, who lost her temper.

They narrowly beat Trump in November. The best I can surmise is that the Democrats deeply feared the potential for Trump running again in 2024 -- but as the conventional wisdom goes, thngs can happen next week that change everything, why spend so much energy and prestige on what might or might not happen in 2024? And of course, the Republicans who were squishy on the "trial" probably ended their careers.

If Pelosi and Schumer were trying to make things bad for the plebs,, they didn't display competence in the attempt.

Now let's look at TJ Ducklo. (I'm not sure what I'd do if I had a surname that reminded people of a duck. It's possible, given the report of his threats against a Politico reporter, that he compensates for the unserious name by trying to terrify people, which I guess is one strategy, though it didn't work out for him here.)

I've already noted that his boss, Whte House press secretary Psaki, has quickly earned a reputation for incompetence herself, and she certainly lived up to it in l'affaire Ducklo. First, it comes out that Ducklo threatened, insulted, and abused Tara Palmeri in a profanity-laced rant. only weeks after the president assured his staff that doing this would get them fired on the spot. (Palmeri, acrtually, comes off in her public persona as not much more serious than Ducklo. This whole thing just looks like a spat among the high school social set.)

So press secretary Psaki's reaction, rather than to follow the announced policy and fire duckboy on the spot, is to ask him to apologize or something, which he doesn't quite do. So then, certainly under pressure from other high school movers and shakers, she announces duckboy is to be suspended, without pay, for a week. When that doesn't work, duckboy finally resigns a few days later -- doubtless, as some commentators have suggested, with the assurance there's a prestigious job for him at CNN or someplace like that.

But, as other commentators have also suggested, the one thing they never did was what Biden said they would, fire duckboy on the spot. This was all a tiff between the prom king and the prom queen anyhow. The White House staff and press corps came off yet again as an incestuous cabal of the unserious.

Last we have Gov Newsom and his asociates, who appear to have been caught napping by the recall campaign, which as of this writing has almost certainly achieved the required 1.5 million signatres and will likely reach 2 million by next month's deadline. For weeks, Democrat insiders had been dismissing the effort, simply repeating the mantra that "no Republican has won statewide office in 16 years". Nevertheless, the last governor to be recalled was a Democrat, and he lost to a Republican.

Now the story has shifted. Newsom is polishing his image. I think he needs more than polishing at this point. There are a couple of problems for Newsom even if he beats back the recall effort. The first is that the campaign, which at this point is likely to take place, will be expensive and drain Democrat resourcres for 2022.

The second is that a recall election differs from a regular gubernatorial election in that there's no primary, there's just a range of candidates against one incumbent. The winner just needs a plurality, assuming the governor is recalled. This means that, depending on how the campaign shakes out, other candidates can split Newsom's vote, even if they're Democrats.

Insiders, who'd been dismissing the recall up to a few weeks ago, have already said it's now too late to stop the election. It doesn't look so far as though Newsom has thought to do much more than polish his image.

You don't get figs from thistles. Nor do screwups very frequently accomplish what they set out to do, however nefarious their intent.