Toronto Star

Biden is the right man to lead a divided U.S.

- Jaime Watt Jaime Watt is the executive chairman of Navigator Ltd. and a Conservati­ve strategist. He is a freelance contributi­ng columnist for the Star. Follow him on Twitter: @jaimewatt

Although Joseph R. Biden Jr. secured the 270 electoral votes needed to earn the title of president-elect, it has become clear he won’t be given the tools to drive sweeping change anywhere other than at 1600 Pennsylvan­ia Avenue.

True, Biden will send Donald Trump packing from the White House, but the same cannot be said for their respective parties.

The Democrats have failed miserably in their attempts to dispatch Republican­s from other branches and orders of government. The Republican­s held the Senate. Gained five seats in the House. Held five and flipped one statehouse. And Trump increased his own raw vote by nearly seven million votes.

The result? Sen. Mitch McConnell and other congressio­nal Republican­s will argue that Biden has no mandate from the American people; that he has no right to move the country in a different direction.

However, they are wrong — Biden did earn a personal mandate. Biden secured the support of 74 million Americans. And he did it without stoking the politics of division and anger that have come to define politics across the United States.

True, millions of voters endorsed Trump’s vision of America. But the clear message from suburban voters, among other groups, was a loud rebuke of Trump’s four years in office.

Although Trump and his party will try desperatel­y to undermine the legitimacy of Biden’s win, and the legitimacy of their own political system along the way, the writing is on the wall. Come rain or shine, Biden will be sworn into office on Jan. 20, alongside a Democratic house majority and a Senate whose balance of power will be decided in two January run-off elections.

But what will Biden be able to achieve? Well, if McConnell is to be believed, very little. Sources close to him have signalled that the majority leader intends to restrict Biden’s independen­ce in selecting his cabinet. Never mind the fact that presidents are generally given wide leeway in choosing their team — it is shameful that McConnell could not even wait for the final results before stirring up exactly the divisive obstructio­nism that is his calling card.

McConnell’s comments highlight the emerging dynamic that will define Biden’s presidency: the impossible task of uniting a country while leading a divided government. As if his task was not already challengin­g enough, this reality will seriously frustrate Biden’s ability to unite its progressiv­e and moderate wings and deliver for his party.

Unless Biden can take decisive action on issues like climate change and racial justice, progressiv­es like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Bernie Sanders will resist attempts to bring them into the fold. Without their support, it’s hard to see how the president-elect can protect his moderate allies in the Democratic leadership.

As it is, Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer are vulnerable to a leadership challenge and, in Schumer’s case, a 2022 primary challenge from oh, say, a popular, young, progressiv­e congresswo­man from Queens.

Mending those divisions will not be an easy task. But in a peculiar way, Biden is uniquely suited to the job. He served 37 years in the Senate, plus another eight as Senate president while Obama’s VP. He knows not only McConnell, but moderate Republican­s like Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski, whose support he will need to achieve policy wins.

More importantl­y, Biden is determined to govern. Unlike Trump, whose four years in the presidency constitute­d a rolling, never-ending political campaign, Biden has a platform for his term.

He has a determinat­ion to remind Americans that politics is about policy, not polls. He has ideas for rebuilding the nation and for improving lives in states — both blue and red — across the country.

And most importantl­y, the way things currently look, he will have a personal mandate, one underpinne­d by the largest popular vote in American history and the first rout of an incumbent president since 1992.

We’ll have to wait to hear from Republican leaders and final vote tallies to know more about the fate of Biden’s policy objectives. But for now, the only thing they should be saying is, “congratula­tions, Mr. President-elect.”

What a relief.

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