Opinion editor’s note: Strib Voices publishes a mix of commentary online and in print each day. To contribute, click here.
•••
It once was possible to imagine — at least if you had a lively imagination — that political campaigns had an edifying, even educational value for the American electorate. One could hope that by listening to candidates and their allies debate public policy issues voters might emerge with a clearer understanding of the choices, trade-offs and compromises to be considered once the campaign dust had settled.
This year, little room remains for such pretty illusions. The climaxing presidential cage match of 2024 is a festival of fallacies in economic affairs — tariffs, subsidies, price controls, free stuff for all — and a riot of evasions and accusations on almost everything else.
For that reason, it seems particularly useful to seize a rare moment of illumination, provided inadvertently by the latest verbal misstep (at least, I think it’s the latest) from Minnesota’s very own, self-proclaimed “knucklehead” governor, Tim Walz.
Last week, according to news reports, speaking at a fundraiser at the private residence of California Gov. Gavin Newsom, Walz, an ever-pedantic former teacher, treated what was likely a roomful of the well-tanned, well-coiffed and well-heeled to a lesson on why they needed to open their checkbooks to support the Harris-Walz campaign’s efforts to win votes in far-flung, unfashionable corners of flyover country.
In the process Walz came up with a remarkably clear, concise and eloquent articulation of the virtue of America’s Electoral College, a constitutional bulwark that Walz, like most Democrats, wants to abolish.
“I think all of us know the Electoral College needs to go,” Walz is quoted as declaring. “We need … national popular vote, but that’s not the world we live in. So we need to win Beaver County, Pennsylvania. We need to be able to go into York, Pennsylvania, and win. We need to be in western Wisconsin and win … .”