What Happens Now? Mike Johnson Just Signaled the Next Move on Birthright Citizenship
Here's Why Abdul El-Sayed Says He Won't Support Chuck Schumer for Senate Majority...
Leftist Trolls Are Trying to Give UK World Cup Fan the Freddy Treatment
Here's How Mamdani's Wife Marked the Fourth of July
Two Blue Cities Were War Zones Over the Holiday Weekend
This Former Elizabeth Warren Staffer Attended the Ayatollah's Funeral, and Here's What She...
A Democrat Just Vowed to Investigate America's 250th Celebration for Daring to Invoke...
The Next Great American Frontier
Socialists Say Zohran Mamdani Delivered Record-Low Murders in NYC. There's Just One Proble...
Spencer Pratt Has a Message For Zohran Mamdani: 'F**k You Communists'
Tyler Robinson to Face Charlie Kirk’s Widow, Parents in Preliminary Hearing
Faith, Opportunity, and the Future of America’s Forgotten Communities
Not So Fast: Belgium Appeals Balogun Decision Ahead of USA Game Tonight
Trump Reveals the One Person He Could Nominate to the Supreme Court Who...
Trump Accounts Launch With Historic Stock Market Move
OPINION

Democrats May Need the Courage of a Hugh Scott Moment

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Democrats May Need the Courage of a Hugh Scott Moment

Hours after President Joe Biden's feeble debate performance Thursday night that left voters across the country stunned, two of Pennsylvania's most powerful Democrats, Gov. Josh Shapiro (D-Pa.) and Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.), pushed back against calls for Biden to step down from his reelection campaign.

Advertisement

Shapiro appeared on MSNBC and CNN and was repeatedly asked if he thought Biden should step aside. He admitted that Biden had a bad debate, but given the possibility of a second term for former President Donald Trump, Shapiro said the stakes are too high for Biden to step aside.

Fetterman admonished Democrats on X more bluntly, telling them to "chill the f*** out" and saying he "refused to join the Democratic vultures on Biden's shoulder after the debate." Also: "No one knows more than me that a rough debate is not the sum total of the person and their record."

Both Shapiro and Fetterman, known individually for their straight talk and not pulling any punches, are not following the admirable example of a former U.S. senator from Pennsylvania, Republican Hugh Scott, a one-time Senate minority leader. In 1974, Scott and two other Republican leaders had the courage to visit embattled President Richard Nixon to tell him the Watergate scandal made impeachment imminent and that he should resign.

Nixon announced his resignation the next day.

David Urban, a former 2016 Trump campaign adviser and western Pennsylvania native, said you cannot tell voters to deny what they saw with their own eyes last night.

"People just cannot unsee what happened right in front of them," said Urban, a CNN contributor who was at the debate Thursday night in Atlanta.

Advertisement

Related:

2024 ELECTION

"I don't think there is anyone with the political courage that Hugh Scott had to step forward to tell Biden it is time go," he said, adding, "I can imagine if it were such a person like that, it has to be someone from his family."

Jill Biden, the president's wife, showed no signs of doing that when she took the stage with the president after the debate in front of supporters, gushing, "Joe, you did such a great job. You answered every question."

Youngstown State University political science professor Paul Sracic said no Hugh Scott has stepped up because at least Nixon had someone palatable to both the president's party and the general public as his vice president.

"The difference here is there's no [Vice President] Gerald Ford," Sracic explained. "There's nobody. They don't know who's waiting in the wings who can actually defeat Trump."

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement