President Joe Biden hosted a small group of scholars and historians for lunch on Wednesday as he gears up for a speech framing the upcoming election as a battle for the nation’s democracy.

The discussion revolved around “ongoing threats to democracy and democratic institutions both here in America and around the world, as well as the opportunities we face as a nation,” the White House said in a statement.

Princeton’s Eddie Glaude Jr. and Sean Wilentz, Harvard’s Annette Gordon-Reed, Yale’s Beverly Gage and Boston College’s Heather Cox Richardson were among the attendees, as well as presidential biographer — and occasional Biden speech writer — Jon Meacham.

Attendees were tight-lipped about what was discussed at the gathering. One would only go so far as to say they “talked about American history and its bearing on the present — a lively exchange of ideas.”

Another person in the room, who like the others was not authorized to speak publicly about a private meeting, said the historians urged the president “to call out the moment for what it is.” In blunt terms, the academics discussed looming threats to the nation’s democracy and warned about the slow crawl of authoritarianism around the globe.

  • BeautifulMind ♾️@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    I’m encouraged to hear that he’s talking with historians on the current moment; there’s a lot going on right now that if he just follows politics-as-usual may result in a failure of democracy in the United States.

    The deficits in trust the Democratic party are experiencing today might be unprecedented in modern US politics, but the pattern on display bears striking similarity to the politics of the Antebellum period in the United States, and there are also stark parallels to be drawn between US politics today and that of Weimar Germany in the 1920s.

    The last thing Biden can afford to do is double down on the status quo. Although his admin has been doing yeoman’s work in bringing back progressive policy, I worry that his political instincts on Gaza will have him rush to the “middle ground” to appease the right, when really that isn’t a middle ground at all- and in doing that he risks squandering whatever goodwill he’s accumulated among likely democratic voters.