However the race came out on Tuesday night, it was fitting that Terry McAuliffe’s easy run to the Virginia governorship blew up over the school board issue, itself an absurd culmination of the Democratic strategy of painting every opponent of their policies as a white supremacist and pro-Trump Nazi.

Joe Biden came to the presidency gifted with two vaccines, a rocket ship of an economic rebound, and a mandate for moderation, and yet has acted in office like his only constituency is the left. If he can’t satisfy their every...

Virginia Democratic gubernatorial candidate Terry McAuliffe speaks to supporters in Falls Church, Va., Nov. 2.

Photo: Win McNamee/Getty Images

However the race came out on Tuesday night, it was fitting that Terry McAuliffe’s easy run to the Virginia governorship blew up over the school board issue, itself an absurd culmination of the Democratic strategy of painting every opponent of their policies as a white supremacist and pro-Trump Nazi.

Joe Biden came to the presidency gifted with two vaccines, a rocket ship of an economic rebound, and a mandate for moderation, and yet has acted in office like his only constituency is the left. If he can’t satisfy their every policy wish, as I pointed out in May, at least he can give them the white supremacist menace.

And so it has continued with ever-increasing insistence: The excessive congressional flogging of the Jan. 6 riot. The voting rights kabuki as if democracy’s survival depends on a bunch of reforms nobody had been thinking about the day before yesterday. The anti-anti-critical-race-theory panic that portrays dissenting middle-class parents as the equivalent of terrorists.

It culminated in a ludicrous and embarrassing performance when the White House and staffers of the National School Boards Association ginned up a letter demanding that protesting parents be prosecuted under the Patriot Act. That letter now has been disavowed by the association. Attorney General Merrick Garland, who on its slender premise mobilized the FBI, was left twisting in the wind. And so was Mr. McAuliffe, who was supposed to be a shoo-in until he waded foolishly into the controversy by suggesting parents deserved no say in their kids’ schooling.

And yet, as if to demonstrate their imperviousness to any doubt, Mr. McAuliffe’s allies sent voters to the polls this week with a final note clanging in their ears: the now-admitted employment of fellow Democrats to masquerade as white-supremacist supporters of his Republican opponent, Glenn Youngkin.

Mr. McAuliffe had to disavow this too, but not before his staff were shown to have busily promoted the canard with their tweets.

During a recent four-day media bubble over a Washington Post op-ed, I posed the obvious rejoinder: What about the “threat to democracy” from Mr. Trump’s opponents if, instead of losing, he should win in 2024? The most dispiriting answer was from the Brookings Institution’s Fiona Hill, still trying to live down her service in the Trump White House while peddling a book recasting herself as a diversity hero (she’s from England). To a Politico reporter, Ms. Hill insisted: “If he makes a successful return to the presidency in 2024, democracy’s done.”

Even allowing for ninnyism in search of clicks, how is this not a justification for violence if the election doesn’t turn out the way Democrats want?

The country could stand in such times to hear from a president who is a grown-up. Moderate is not a synonym for weak; a moderate has to face down his own party’s recalcitrants as well as the opposition. But in Mr. Biden’s case it has been a synonym for weak and even something more than weak. The singular moment, for my money, was his rewarding with the vice presidency the rival who implied on national TV he was a racist. This followed his choice to begin his campaign with a demonstrable lie about what Donald Trump

said after Charlottesville; it followed his habit of invoking neo-Nazis with “neck veins bulging” so robotically that even supporters lifted their eyebrows.

The pattern has started to become a little too telling. You can do worse than read one of the Hunter Biden text exchanges unearthed by the New York Post. It is terrible in its symbolism. In a lengthy tirade, Hunter blames his father, who has yet to commit to running for the presidency, as if he is responsible for media stories about the son’s drug abuse, influence peddling and philandering. “If you don’t run I’ll never have a chance at redemption,” Hunter berates the future president.

This, from a middle-aged son whose every hope and expectation in life has depended on his father climbing the greasy pole so Hunter can cash in.

And Mr. Biden’s answer? Along with a stream of appeasing, innocuous words, a plea that he’s “positive” that his text messages are a “target.”

OK, millions of Americans know what it is to have manipulative, narcissistic, substance-abusing family member, but still Mr. Biden the president is hard to distinguish from the father seen in the texts, aka the perpetual blackmail victim.

He was elected with a clear mandate for middle-of-the-road leadership but can’t seem to impose his will on anybody. In his worst moments, he has lost sight of his natural place in the conversation and even who he is, while trying to compensate by aping the attitudes and slogans of people whose agenda he doesn’t really grasp. If Hillary Clinton adopted the losing strategy for Democrats of vilifying large chunks of the electorate, Mr. Biden seems to have internalized the bully who he thinks is always out there ready to call him a racist deplorable too.

Just one year after the “defund the police” movement began in Minneapolis, a ballot to amend the city charter to “remove the Police Department and replace it with a Department of Public Safety." Image: Reuters/Getty Images Composite: Mark Kelly The Wall Street Journal Interactive Edition