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How the Democrats Lost the White House
Business Standard
|July 14, 2025
In 2024, the latest 400-page dispatch from last year's presidential contest, the authors, a trio of veteran journalists from different august papers—Josh Dawsey (The Wall Street Journal), Tyler Pager (The New York Times) and Isaac Arnsdorf (The Washington Post)—write that "there was a view popular among some political insiders that this election had been over before it was started."
The authors end up arguing that things were not so fated, but reading what they have to report, I couldn't help feeling those political insiders had a point. In this account, Joe Biden's operation resembles its candidate: Listless, semi-coherent, sleepwalking toward calamity. It exists for its own sake, impervious to outside input, pushed along by inertia alone. The Trump campaign—at least after his first indictment—provides a burst of energy and purpose—appears driven, disciplined, capable of evaluating trade-offs and making tough decisions. Trump seems to want to win; Biden just wants to survive.
Things do change when Kamala Harris enters the fray. She gives Donald Trump a run for his money, but her campaign is held back from the start by the slow-moving disaster that made it necessary in the first place.
2024 is a well-paced, thorough and often (darkly) humorous account of the two-year campaign season that began when Trump announced he was running for president again—at a Mar-a-Lago launch so disorganized and half-hearted, the authors write, that even sycophantic Trump allies admitted it was "a dud."
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