Oman Daily Observer

Pressure builds on Joe Biden to deliver

- JAMES OLIPHANT

During his presidenti­al campaign, Joe Biden vowed to fight for the soul of America. As he formally assumes office as the next US president on Wednesday, Biden now faces the steep task of repairing a nation’s soul in battered and desperate shape.

Few presidents, if any, have taken power in circumstan­ces such as these: a still-raging pandemic claiming lives and shredding livelihood­s, a continuing threat of armed insurrecti­on and a defiant former president who faces a US Senate trial charged with encouragin­g an attack on his country’s capital.

A Democrat, Biden will preside over a deeply polarised electorate, with millions of voters still believing defeated Republican President Donald Trump’s false claims of election fraud, and a divided Congress, where gridlock looms as the default and success will come only by compromise.

With that, Biden is under significan­t pressure to turn his pledges of unity and competence into results - and swiftly.

“He has to stay focused on vaccine distributi­on and solving the ‘last mile’ problem,” said Joe Trippi, a veteran Democratic strategist. “Failure is not an option. Losing that focus is not an option.”

Biden wants Congress to move quickly. His team believes the most effective way to lower the political temperatur­e is through results, not rhetoric - specifical­ly, the passage of the $1.9 trillion virus relief package that Biden has proposed as a first step in stabilisin­g the economy, opening schools and ramping up vaccinatio­ns nationwide.

The public wants to see a functional government deliver, a Biden adviser said, adding that plenty of Trump voters have been hurt by the pandemic.

“There is a path out of this darkness,” another Biden adviser said, “but we will need support from Congress.”

Unlike other newly elected presidents, Biden will have no crowds to rally him. Instead, he will be sworn in with historic Washington resembling an armed camp, the streets deserted due to the twin dangers of civil unrest and COVID-19.

Douglas Brinkley, a presidenti­al historian at Rice University, likened Biden’s inaugurati­on to Abraham Lincoln’s in 1861, when the United States was on the brink of the Civil War and the new president faced assassinat­ion threats.

“The smell of violence was in the air,” Brinkley said.

The nation is not on that kind of precipice, Brinkley added. But the Capitol siege will cloud the early days of Biden’s presidency. After being impeached by the US House of Representa­tives on a charge of inciting the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol, Trump faces a Senate trial that threatens to derail Biden’s agenda from the very start and delay confirmati­on votes for his executive branch nominees.

Biden will enter the White House with more of a tailwind than Trump enjoyed. He has the approval of a little more than half the country - 53 per cent, according to Reuters/ipsos polling, while Trump came into office four years ago at 46 per cent.

BIDEN IS UNDER SIGNIFICAN­T PRESSURE TO TURN HIS PLEDGES OF UNITY AND COMPETENCE INTO RESULTS AND SWIFTLY

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