Joe Biden speaks with Kamala Harris outside the White House in Washington, D.C. Credit: Joe Biden on X.(GDA via AP Images)

The painful circumstances of the end to Joe Biden’s candidacy will soon be forgotten, but the accomplishments of his presidency will be remembered for generations.

Biden will be seen by historians as the most consequential one-term president in American history, with trillions in investments in infrastructure, technology, and green energy that will propel the United States forward. And his exit will be in the selfless tradition of Cincinnatus and George Washington, who originated the peaceful transfer of power that is the sine qua non of our republic.

As I reviewed why Biden definitely had to go, I had a flashback this afternoon that might be relevant. My thoughts turned to when Biden was vice president and got out ahead of President Barack Obama on marriage equality, thereby hastening a change in policy.

The speed of the social acceptance of gay marriage in the first part of the 21st Century was the product of common experience. Nearly every American has a gay relative or friend, and can thus relate to marriage equality on a personal level.

The same was true of Biden’s age. Millions of people have had to gently tell their aging parents that they can no longer drive safely amid concerns that their health could deteriorate at any time. This common experience with a loved one began harming Biden in the polls in 2022 and it swamped him after his June debate with Donald Trump.

“Loved one” is an apt term. Biden is loved, and his moral stature will now surge. That’s why his endorsement of Kamala Harris makes her the presumptive nominee. He will now be free to concentrate on a deal in the Mideast that will help the Democratic ticket. (A treaty in Ukraine will be harder if not impossible to achieve because Vladimir Putin is holding out for Trump).

Biden will take many shots at Trump—starting in his primetime address this week—and they will land. Everyone respects a magnanimous elder statesman.

Republican charges of a White House “cover-up” of Biden’s health will win them exactly zero new votes. It just reminds people that there’s now only one non-transparent geezer in the race. And every reporter should ask Republican attack dogs if they’ve seen Biden’s post-G-7 press conference. Are they that knowledgeable about global affairs? Can they not grasp the difference between competent governance and vigorous campaigning?

I’m so glad that Harris said today that “It is my intention is to earn and win this nomination.” This will help address the inevitable rap that she is a DEI candidate.

The “blitz primary” idea is to start this weekend with a series of three or four joint appearances, perhaps moderated by Oprah. Dispatching rivals onstage would get Harris’s campaign off on a strong footing and give her an early chance to exceed the low expectations that so many voters have for her. Watch for stories of a “New Kamala.”

To help her clear the bar and seem even more inevitable, I expect Harris will announce her choice for vice president soon. Donors have already been vetting candidates. Among those mentioned are North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper, Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro, Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer, Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear, and Arizona Senator Mark Kelly.

Each has advantages and disadvantages. Cooper could help put North Carolina in play for Democrats, but they may need to first nail down a must-win state where they currently lag. Shapiro is a highly popular governor of a battleground state, and one third of Trump voters approve of him, but a Black-Jewish ticket might be a bit much. Whitmer is also popular and well-spoken but doubling down with two women could be risky. Beshear is an attractive option but Kentucky is red. Kelly is a former astronaut and highly decorated veteran with a wife, Gabby Giffords, who could highlight the gun safety issue, but he might be underpowered on stage.

There will be no “open convention” that wastes time on politicking that is needed to promote the nominee and savage Trump. Instead, we will see remote voting in the next month by the nearly 40,000 delegates. They are likely to support Harris on the first ballot unless she messes up between now and then.

All the money talk is not especially relevant. It’s easier if Harris is the nominee but not a deal-breaker financially if she isn’t. Donors will have to opt-in to shift their contributions to a non-Harris nominee but there are workarounds to other impediments that involve super PACs and the DNC. I’ve consulted experts on this and it’s pretty clear the lawyers can figure it out. In the meantime, expect a gusher of money to the super PACs beginning tomorrow. And any donor who “maxed out” to the Biden-Harris campaign will now free to max out again, yielding even more cash.

Biden’s historic decision injects energy, excitement, and purpose into the Democratic campaign. Be of good cheer.

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Jonathan Alter, a contributing editor of the Washington Monthly, is a former senior editor and columnist at Newsweek, a filmmaker, journalist, political analyst, and the publisher of the Substack Old Goats...