The National Pulse’s Editor-in-Chief, Raheem Kassam, warned in mid-July that the Democratic Party would employ a snap election, snap candidate strategy in the United States similar to those used by globalists in Europe to head off a populist electoral insurgency in France and ensure a Labour victory in the United Kingdom. Now, the American corporate media is embracing the country’s own ‘snap’ election candidate as a good thing, throwing their support behind corrupt backroom dealing in candidate selection.
“It’s all very important to what happens in November. I just think you have to be very, very careful here, especially of the Biden stuff, because you had a snap election in the UK, and you had a snap election in France,” Kassam explained last month. He continued, arguing that Biden would be replaced at the top of the ticked—essentially creating a ‘snap’ candidate and election scenario before the November election. The short amount of time until ballots are cast would prevent a thorough public vetting of the new Democrat nominee.
EMBRACING ‘SNAP’ ELECTION.
With Biden‘s replacement by his vice president, Kamala Harris, having come to pass, the corporate media is backing the exceptionally brief campaign cycle for Harris as ‘good’ for democracy. “Did Kamala accidentally stumble into a new model for a very short campaign? What if a[sic] party pushed all the primaries into the weeks before the convention?” Semafor Editor-in-Chief Ben Smith wrote on X (formerly Twitter). He added: “The long American campaigns have a real downside.”
Did Kamala accidentally stumble into a new model for a very short campaign? What if the a party pushed all the primaries into the weeks before the convention? The long American campaigns have a real downside.
— Ben Smith (@semaforben) August 12, 2024
Echoing Smith’s sentiments, Vanity Fair correspondent and former CNN flunkie Brian Stelter posted: “An end to never-ending campaigns?”
The swapping of Harris for Biden has upended the 2024 presidential race, which is now a dead heat between the Democratic Party candidate and former President Donald J. Trump. Additionally, Biden‘s exit from the race has tamped down public concerns over the 81-year-old Democrat’s clear cognitive decline—though he remains in the White House.
An end to never-ending campaigns? https://t.co/vUc2FaN8uN
— Brian Stelter (@brianstelter) August 12, 2024