By C. Douglas Golden | The Western Journal
President Joe Bidenās White House has done pretty much everything in its power to paint GOP Gov. Ron DeSantisā Florida as prime driver behind another wave of COVID-19 ā messaging that has more to do with DeSantisā role as a potential 2024 presidential challenger than it does with public health.
Last week brought another prime example. On Thursday, asked about DeSantisā criticisms of the administration, Biden tried his hand at shade-throwing: āGovernor who?ā he told reporters.
On Friday, he probably wished he hadnāt.
The latest round in the war of words began Tuesday as Biden called on Florida and Texas to implement harsher COVID restrictions because of the delta variant or to āget out of the wayā and let the federal government do it.
āJust two states, Florida and Texas, account for one-third of all new COVID-19 cases in the entire country. Just two states,ā Biden said, according to KXAS-TV in Dallas-Fort Worth.
āLook, we need leadership from everyone. If some governors arenāt willing to do the right thing to beat this pandemic, then they should allow businesses and universities who want to do the right thing to be able to do it.ā
In a response on Wednesday, DeSantis blasted the administration for criticizing Florida and Texas for their COVID policies while refusing to take serious measures regarding a massive influx of COVID-positive illegal immigrants coming across the southern border.
āJoe Biden suggests that if you donāt do lockdown, policies then you should āget out of the way,āā DeSantis said. āBut let me tell you this: If youāre coming after the rights of parents in Florida, Iām standing in your way. Iām not going to let you get away with it. If youāre trying to deny kids a proper in-person education, Iām going to stand in your way, and Iām going to stand up for the kids in Florida.
āIf youāre trying to restrict people, impose mandates, if youāre trying to ruin their jobs and their livelihoods and their small business, if youāre trying to lock people down, I am standing in your way, and Iām standing for the people of Florida,ā he continued. āSo why donāt you do your job? Why donāt you get this border secure? And until you do that, I donāt want to hear a blip about COVID from you.ā
"I don't want to hear a blip about COVID from you."
Gov. DeSantis responded to President Biden's criticism of him over his handling of COVID: https://t.co/uUlBEOrIXf
In Florida hospitals, 'there are only so many beds': https://t.co/wPd8R1Xxgu pic.twitter.com/wqVULbQ4hM
— Local 12/WKRC-TV (@Local12) August 5, 2021
On Thursday, two days after he singled out DeSantisās state in his speech, Biden pretended he didnāt even know who DeSantis was. Because, you know, heās not that important, get it?
#GovernorWho might get a bit angry after this one. pic.twitter.com/VGpHt9IHvh
— Matthew Rakestraw (@M_Rakestraw) August 6, 2021
Yes, āGovernor who?ā Thereās one problem with Biden trying to pretend DeSantis isnāt important enough to remember, something DeSantis himself pointed out when he responded to the presidentās diss on Friday.
āI guess Iām not surprised that Biden doesnāt remember me,ā DeSantis said at a news conference, according to Newsmax. āI guess the question is, what else has he forgotten?ā
A lot, as youāre no doubt aware. However, he wasnāt just taking a cheap shot at Bidenās diminishing returns in the mental acuity department.
āBidenās forgotten about the crisis on our southern border, I can tell you that,ā DeSantis said.
āBiden has forgotten about the inflation thatās biting the budgets of families all throughout our country. Biden has forgotten about the demonstrators who were fighting for freedom down in Cuba, and Bidenās even forgotten about the Constitution itself, as we saw with what he did with this [eviction] moratorium.ā
DeSantis was referring to the presidentās extension of a moratorium on evictions for renters ā something even the president admitted was likely unconstitutional when he announced it Tuesday but which he framed as a gambit to buy more time.
As for who DeSantis is, he said he was āthe governor who protects parents and their ability to make the right choices for their kidsā education. Iām the governor who protects the jobs and education and businesses in Florida by not letting the federal government lock us down. Iām the governor who answers to the people of Florida, not to bureaucrats in Washington.ā
DeSantis responds to Bidenās āGovernor Whoā comment:
āIām not surprised that Biden doesnāt remember me. I guess the question is what else has he forgotten? Bidenās forgotten about the crisis at our southern border.ā
pic.twitter.com/tvXUDiTKGV— Daily Caller (@DailyCaller) August 6, 2021
And thatās what you get for a āGovernor who?ā quip.
Itās not only that Biden opened himself up where heās particularly vulnerable: Biden oft comes across as a man for whom remembering his current home address at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. in the District of Columbia is a task on par with completing the Sunday New York Times crossword puzzle.
(Of course, itās possible that Biden is so coddled by his staff and a sympathetic media that he doesnāt realize almost half the country thinks heās at least halfway to dementia, but that would be a bad sign all by itself.)
One assumes he does remember who DeSantis is, since Bidenās own press secretary makes a habit of attacking the governor, and just two days earlier Biden himself gave DeSantisās state a lecture from the bully pulpit of the presidency.
Therein lies another issue with the insult, though: If Biden wants to act as if the delta variant is Very Serious⢠and requires DeSantis to reinstitute White House-endorsed COVID curbs or āget out of the wayā and let the federal government take the reins, he shouldnāt just pretend heās a nobody two days later because it might get a laugh from sycophants.
DeSantis didnāt even need to undermine Bidenās message at this point; the president already had.
Finally, pithy as āGovernor who?ā may sound, jabs like that let the target of the insult define themselves ā and what the issues are ā on their own terms. And oh, boy, did DeSantis ever define himself.
On the other hand, thereās still the real possibility Biden seriously meant āGovernor who?ā I guess weāll know for certain if, in a few years, heās referring to DeSantis as āPresident who?ā
Categories: Politics