The insidious message behind Joe Biden's call for 'unity'

He's insulting progressive voters with a dangerous false equivalence

Joe Biden.
(Image credit: Illustrated | DOMINICK REUTER/AFP/Getty Images, slavadubrovin/iStock)

If you live long enough to witness more than a few seasons of American politics you learn one thing for certain: Unity is a sucker's game. Unity is what they sell you when they're all out of justice. Unity is the little Fourth of July flag they hand you so you won't ball a fist.

That's the kind of unity Joe Biden pitched, high and tight — a threat as much as an offering — to a crowd of about 6,000 presumed supporters in the City of Brotherly Love on Saturday afternoon. Flanked by red, white, and blue signs that made the insistent rather than inspirational nature of his theme crystal clear by rendering it in the past tense (UNITED), Biden, as he has done throughout the early weeks of his campaign, made Trump his target, referring to him several times as the "divider-in-chief." He also, rather pointedly, promised that "You will not hear me speak ill of another Democrat."

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Peter Birkenhead

Peter Birkenhead is a writer who lives in Washington, D.C. His work has appeared in The Washington Post, The Daily Beast, the Los Angeles Review of Books, and other publications. He is the author of Gonville, a memoir published by Simon & Schuster.