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Monday, January 18, 2021
THE BIDEN-HARRIS INAUGURAL: FOR WHAT WE ARE ABOUT TO RECEIVE
The last episode of
the great television drama The West Wingcenters
aroundthe inauguration of Matthew Santos (Jimmy Smits) as successor to the show’s two-term president, Jeb Bartlett
(Martin Sheen). While riding to the capitol,
Bartlett asked Santos about his speech. Santos replied that it included a few
good lines, but nothing like John F. Kennedy’s ‘Ask not what your county can do for you, but what you can
do for your country.’ Bartlett sneered, “Yeah, JFK really screwed us with that
one, didn’t he?”
When Joe Biden delivers his inaugural address, it’s unlikely he can meet the JFK
standard either. Nobody has since that bitterly cold day in 1961 and little in
Biden’s rhetorical past suggests he has such a speech in him. That doesn’t
diminish the importance of the moment or the address he will give.
With the January 6 invasion and occupation of
the U.S. Capitol by a mob inspired by outgoing President Donald Trump, our political situation arguably rivals
what Lincoln faced. These marauders, having builtgallows outside, marched
through the building waving Confederate
flags and shouting “Hang (Vice President) Pence.” The House of Representatives has since impeached Trump for his role in the insurrection and
the U.S. Senate will soon hold a trial. Add the pandemic that has killed 400,000 Americans and still rages and throw
in the historic nature of the new vice president’s ascent and we have a truly
unprecedented situation.
The January 6 debacle
means a massive security presence at the capitol for the
inaugural ceremonies,
including thousands of National Guard troops, tall fences, concrete
barriers, and multiple checkpoints for capitol employees and the limited number
of visitors who can attend the festivities. Inaugurals play a key role in
showing the nation and the world what a peaceful transition of power looks like
in a
democracy. Trump’s decision that he won’t attend diminishes that to an
extent, but even the symbolic power of an appearance by the outgoing president
pales in comparison with the need for putting the destructive Trump presidency
in the rear-view mirror. Biden now doesn’t want him at the inaugural and
neither do many Americans.
The security
arrangements and the pandemic dictate that this inauguration
look different
than any we’ve seen. First, thousands of people won’t look on from the capitol
mall. Though Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris will take their oaths
of office on the capitol steps as usual, social distancing will keep attendance
at a fraction of normal. Biden’s inaugural committee has told his supporters
they shouldn’t travel from across the country for the proceedings, recommending
television or virtual viewing.
The Harris Factor
The challenges of the
nation’s political divide, Trump’s impeachment, the pandemic, and the resulting
economic difficulties will justifiably make Biden’s speech the lead in every
post-inauguration news story. Calmer circumstances would likely mean more
emphasis on the swearing in of the nation’s
first female president or vice
president. Kamala Devin Harris of California will make that history
when she takes the oath of office as the 49thvice president. That she is also a woman of color only
increases the historical significance. Trump’s blatantly racist presidency and
the number of Americans who would have given him a second term squash any
suggestion her election hails a post-racial America.
Biden says she will play the same
kind of role in this administration he played in the Obama-Biden years. He promises he will consult
her on every major decision and make her the “last person in the room” in those
situations.
The Speech and the Job Ahead
Harris will stay busy
presiding over the senate following Democratic victories in Georgia runoffs that made the upper chamber a 50-50 party split. The incoming administration has plenty
on its plate. Biden and Harris emphasize how much they will focus on the
pandemic. As one observer put it, the coronavirus remains the “boss” of
everything and everybody. Until the country gets it under control the things
ordinary Americans most want can’t happen -- an economic revival and a return
to normal life unfettered by social distancing,fan-less sporting events, and
restrictions on family and other gatherings. The
pandemic, the limping economy, the political and racial divisions January 6 so starkly
demonstrated, and the country’s fragile psyche make for a long, complicated
to-do list.
Biden’s speech, therefore, requires substantive and spiritual components. Substantively, he need not provide every
detail, but he should offer an outline for conquering the pressing problems,
including the need for restoring the hollowed out federal government Trump
leaves him. He must convince people he will work for them and show he will
govern in a way that benefits everyone.
The moment also requires a speech
that touches souls. It must offer hope for renewing the American spirit. After
four years of a lawless, destructive presidency marked by racial discord and
political turmoil, a bitter campaign, and a dangerous, tumultuous lame duck
period, Biden faces a tired, discouraged, and distraught country.
Inaugurals serve many
functions. They
represent renewal and new beginnings. They also put American democracy on the world
stage and advertise
the virtues of our system. January 6 and Trump’s four years
dimmed our brand. America’s
first chance at polishing its image comes with the Biden-Harris inaugural. Even
with an
dimmed our brand. America’s
first chance at polishing its image comes with the Biden-Harris inaugural. Even
with an impeachment proceeding against Trump pending in the U.S. Senate, a little JFK-style inspiration might help.
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