The Press

Inaugurati­on provided what US needed

- Max Boot

Watching the graceless departure of former president Donald Trump from the White House and the moving inaugurati­on of President Joe Biden, I could not help but recall Warren G Harding’s 1920 campaign slogan: ‘‘Return to normalcy’’. That message resonated because America had just been through so many struggles – many of which echo our present-day travails.

There was a war – World War I – that cost 116,516 US lives. There was a pandemic that claimed the lives of some 675,000 more Americans. There was domestic terrorism – a bombing on Wall Street in 1920 killed some 40 people. There was political strife – a ‘red scare’ followed by thousands of arrests and hundreds of deportatio­ns of alleged radicals.

By 1920, most Americans had had enough. Hence Harding’s election. He turned out to be a short-lived and highly mediocre president whose administra­tion is primarily remembered for its corruption. The 1920s were hardly idyllic: This was not only the Jazz Age but also the age of the Ku Klux Klan and bootlegger­s. But on the whole the ‘Roaring Twenties’ were an oasis of relative prosperity and peace compared with what came before and after.

There is a similar desire, I sense, on the part of most Americans to turn the page on the turmoil and tragedy of the Trump years. We are all exhausted – even, I suspect, Trump’s dwindling band of fans – from watching his garish reality show go on far too long. Trump’s departure ceremony from Joint Base Andrews was all about claiming credit for the few things that went right on his watch (a rising stock market, the developmen­t of coronaviru­s vaccines) without any mention of the more than 400,000 victims of Covid-19 or the millions of Americans out of work. If Trump has ever given any care or considerat­ion to any cause greater than his own ego, he once again gave no indication of it.

There was a reassuring normality about the inaugurati­on that followed his departure, even though the situation was far from normal. The absence of crowds and the outgoing president – and the ubiquity of face masks – served as inescapabl­e reminders that we live in unusual times.

But that simply made the timeless rituals that followed – with Republican and Democratic leaders mingling and the new president promising in his inaugural address to work toward national unity – all the more comforting. Hearing a new president pledge to tell the truth and defend our democracy never sounded so revolution­ary. And the national anthem has seldom resonated as much as it did when Lady Gaga emphasized the words ‘‘our flag was still there’’ and pointed to the flag on the Capitol.

Four years ago, after Trump’s inaugural, former president George W Bush told former secretary of state Hillary Clinton: ‘‘Well, that was some weird s .... ’’ Biden’s inaugurati­on wasn’t weird. It was normal – but far from mundane. It was thrilling in its sanity, exhilarati­ng in its convention­ality. After the craziness of the past four years, that in itself is a triumph – and an augury of better days ahead.–

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