(Bloomberg Opinion) -- Are you ready?
That’s what Joe Biden asked at the end of his speech accepting the Democratic nomination for president, a speech the convention spent the whole week waiting for. He promised competence and empathy, which everyone had earlier praised him for and which he gave as the reason Americans should trust him to deliver.
These convention speeches are normally...well, they’re easy. They almost can’t go wrong. The candidate typically has months to prepare.
He or she has the services of every one of the party’s best wordsmiths. Not to mention the trained professionals who design the platform, the lighting, the sound, signs and banners and whatnot — everything to make it as impressive as possible for the people watching at home. There are four days of build-up to set the themes, and then there’s a bio video, usually with lots of family good humor, always with impressive-seeming highlights of a career, and often with some tragic emotion.
Missing in 2020 was the convention hall, packed with the candidate’s strongest supporters, who have been waiting all week for the big moment, ready to bring the house down even if the candidate trips and drools. Also, there are normally balloons.
I wasn’t sure that Biden’s speech would be so easy. He had most of the normal stuff, but without the thousands of cheering delegates, would it work?
It did.
Most of that was probably just about nomination acceptance speeches being easy. But Biden and the convention certainly did what they could to sell it. The basics were simple: The current president (whom Biden didn’t mention by name) had botched the pandemic, botched the economic response, and botched other things as well. Donald Trump is a target-rich environment for Democrats, and Biden at various points gave a quick tour of some of those weaknesses, whether it was Trump’s recent effort to eliminate funding for Social Security or his habit of praising authoritarian leaders.
But this wasn’t a policy speech, at least not compared with normal Democratic speeches, the pandemic being the exception. There, Biden laid out the case that “it didn’t have to be this bad” and, going into some detail, what he would do about it. He also used the key phrase “economic plan.” Although he discussed it less than most Democratic nominees would probably have done, that portion of the speech was important, especially in contrasting what he would do with what Trump has done.
The case was strong on the merits. It was even stronger for those who had watched the whole convention and were reminded that Biden had been involved in managing public-health crises before and economic recoveries, too.