Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Tumult of Trump years ends with hope

- By Jonathan Martin and Alexander Burns

Joseph Robinette Biden Jr. was elected the 46th president of the United States on Saturday, promising to restore political normalcy and a spirit of national unity to confront raging health and economic crises, and making Donald Trump a one-term president after four years of tumult in the

White House.

Biden’s victory amounted to a repudiatio­n of Trump by millions of voters exhausted with his divisive conduct and chaotic administra­tion, and was delivered by an unlikely alliance of women, people of color, old and young voters and a sliver of disaffecte­d Republican­s. Trump is only the third elected president since World War II to lose re-election, and the first in more than a quarter-century.

The result also provided a history-making moment for Biden’s running mate, Sen. Kamala Harris of California, who

will become the first woman to serve as vice president.

With his triumph, Biden, who turns 78 later this month, fulfilled his decadeslon­g ambition in his third bid for the White House, becoming the oldest person elected president. A pillar of Washington who was first elected amid the Watergate scandal, and who prefers political consensus over combat, Biden will lead a nation and a Democratic Party that have become far more ideologica­l since his arrival in the capital in 1973.

He offered a mainstream Democratic agenda, yet it was less his policy platform than his biography to which many voters gravitated. Seeking the nation’s highest office a half-century after his first campaign, Biden — a candidate in the late autumn of his career — presented his life of setback and recovery to voters as a parable for a wounded country.

Appearing Saturday night before supporters at a drive-in rally in Wilmington, Delaware, and speaking against the din of enthusiast­ic honking, Biden claimed the presidency and called on the country to reunite after what he described as a toxic political interlude.

“Let this grim era of demonizati­on in America begin to end here and now,” he said.

Without addressing Trump, the presidente­lect spoke directly to the president’s supporters and said he recognized their disappoint­ment. “I’ve lost a couple of times myself,” he recalled of his past failures to win the presidency, before adding:

“Now let’s give each other a chance.”

In a statement earlier in the day, Trump insisted “this election is far from over” and vowed that his campaign would “start prosecutin­g our case in court” but offered no details.

Biden’s victory, which came 48 years to the day after he was first elected to the U.S. Senate, set off jubilant celebratio­ns in Democratic-leaning cities. In Washington, people streamed into the streets near the White House and cheered as cars bearing American flags drove by honking.

The race, which concluded after four tense days of vote-counting in a handful of battlegrou­nds, was a singular referendum on Trump in a way no president’s re-election has been in modern times. He coveted the attention, and voters who either adored him or loathed him were eager to render judgment on his tenure. From the beginning to the end of the race, Biden made the president’s character central to his campaign.

This unrelentin­g focus propelled Biden to victory in historical­ly Democratic stronghold­s in the industrial Midwest, with Biden forging a coalition of suburbanit­es and big-city residents to claim at least three states his party lost in 2016. With ballots still being counted in several states, Biden was leading Trump in the popular vote by more than 4 million votes.

Yet even as they turned Trump out of office, voters sent a more uncertain message about the left-of-center platform Biden ran on as Democrats lost seats in the House and made only modest gains in the Senate. The divided judg-ment — a rare example of ticket splitting in partisan times — demonstrat­ed that, for many voters, their disdain for the president was as personal as it was political.

Even in defeat, though, Trump demonstrat­ed his enduring appeal to many white voters and his intense popularity in rural areas, underscori­ng the deep national divisions that Biden has vowed to heal.

In his address Saturday, Biden saluted Black voters, recalling how they revived his campaign at “its lowest ebb,” back in February, and vowed to honor their loyalty. He said the voters had made clear they wanted both parties “to cooperate in their interest” and said he would reach out to Republican­s and Democrats alike.

The outcome of the race came into focus slow

ly as states and municipali­ties grappled with the legal and logistical challenges of voting in the midst of the coronaviru­s pandemic. With an enormous backlog of early and mail-in votes, some states reported their totals in a halting fashion that in the early hours of Wednesday painted a misleading­ly rosy picture for Trump.

But as the big cities of the Midwest and West began to report their totals, the advantage in the race shifted the electoral map in Biden’s favor. By Wednesday afternoon, the former vice president had rebuilt much of the socalled blue wall in the Midwest, reclaiming the historical­ly Democratic battlegrou­nds of Wisconsin and Michigan that Trump carried four years ago. And on Saturday, with troves of ballots coming in from Philadelph­ia and Pittsburgh, he took back Pennsylvan­ia as well.

While Biden stopped short of claiming victory as the week unfolded, he appeared several times in his home state, Delaware, to express confidence that he could win, while urging patience as the nation awaited the results. Even as he sought to claim something of an electoral mandate, noting that he had earned more in the popular vote than any other candidate in history, Biden struck a tone of reconcilia­tion.

It would soon be time, he said, “to unite, to heal, to come together as a nation.”

In the days after the election, Biden and his party faced a barrage of attacks from Trump. The president falsely claimed in a middle-of-the-night appearance at the White House on Wednesday that he had won the race and that Democrats were conjuring fraudulent votes to undermine him, a theme he renewed on Thursday evening in grievance-filled remarks conjuring up, with no evidence, a conspiracy to steal votes from him.

The president’s campaign aides adopted a tone of brash defiance as swing states fell to Biden, promising a flurry of legal action. But while Trump’s ire had the potential to foment political divisions, there was no indication that he could succeed with his seemingly improvisat­ional legal strategy.

Through it all, the coronaviru­s and its ravages on the country hung over the election and shaped the choice for voters. Facing an electorate already fatigued by his aberrant conduct, the president effectivel­y sealed his defeat by minimizing a pandemic that has created simultaneo­us health and economic crises.

Beginning with the outbreak of the virus at the start of the year, through his own diagnosis last month and up to the last hours of the election, Trump disregarde­d his medical advisers and public opinion even as over 230,000 people in the United States perished.

Biden, by contrast, sought to channel the dismay of those appalled by Trump’s mismanagem­ent of the pandemic. He offered himself as a safe harbor for a broad array of Americans, promising to guide the nation out of what he called the “dark winter” of the outbreak, rather than delivering a visionary message with bright ideologica­l themes.

While the president ridiculed mask-wearing and insisted on continuing his large rallies, endangerin­g his own staff members and supporters, Biden and Harris campaigned with caution, avoiding indoor events, insisting on social distancing and always wearing masks.

Convinced that he could win back the industrial Northern states that swung to Trump four years ago, Biden focused his energy on Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvan­ia. Biden triumphed in those states on the strength of overwhelmi­ng support from women, who voted in large numbers to repudiate Trump despite his last-minute pleas to “suburban housewives,” as he called them.

Many of the women who decided the president’s fate were politicall­y moderate college-educated suburbanit­es, who made their presence felt as an electoral force first in the 2018 midterm elections, when a historic wave of female candidates and voters served as the driving force behind the Democratic sweep to power in the House.

Even aside from the pandemic, the 2020 campaign unfolded against a backdrop of national tumult unequaled in recent history, including the House’s vote to impeach the president less than a year ago, a national wave of protests over racial injustice last spring, spasms of civil unrest throughout the summer, the death of a Supreme Court justice in September and the hospitaliz­ation of Trump in October.

Along the way, Trump played to his conservati­ve base, seeking to divide the nation over race and cultural flashpoint­s. He encouraged those fears, and the underlying social divisions that fostered them. And for months he sought to sow doubt over the legitimacy of the political process.

Biden, in response, offered a message of healing that appealed to Americans from far left to center right. He made common cause by promising relief from the unceasing invective and dishonesty of Trump’s presidency.

The former vice president also sought to demonstrat­e his difference­s with the president with his selection of Harris, 56, whose presence on the ticket as the daughter of Indian and Jamaican immigrants stood in stark contrast to Trump’s relentless scapegoati­ng of migrants and members of racial-minority groups.

Biden will be only the second Catholic to attain the presidency, along with John F. Kennedy.

In an era when political difference­s have metastasiz­ed into tribal warfare, at least 74 million voters turned to a figure who has become known as the eulogist in chief for his empathy and friendship­s with Republican­s and Democrats alike.

In a sign of how much Trump alienated traditiona­l Republican­s, a number of prominent members of the party endorsed Biden’s candidacy, including Cindy Mccain, the widow of former Sen. John Mccain; the party’s other two presidenti­al nominees this century, George W. Bush and Mitt Romney, declined to endorse Trump.

Yet for all his lofty language about uniting the country, Biden was a halting candidate who ran a cautious campaign, determined to ensure that the election became a referendum on Trump. The former vice president fully returned to the campaign trail only around Labor Day, and for weeks he limited his appearance­s to one state every other day or so. He went west of the Central time zone just once during the general election.

And he will do so with a Congress that is far more polarized than the Senate he left over a decade ago, with many Republican­s having embraced Trump and Democrats increasing­ly responsive to an energized left. If Biden cannot bridge that divide as president and elicit some cooperatio­n from the GOP, he will face immense pressure from his party’s progressiv­e wing to abandon conciliati­on for a posture of combat.

Biden has held out hope about working with Republican lawmakers while declining to support his party’s most ambitious goals, like single-payer health care and the Green New Deal; he has resisted structural changes such as adding justices to the Supreme Court.

This irked his party’s base but made it difficult for Republican­s, from Trump down the ballot, to portray him as an extremist. Biden was largely absent from the appeals of GOP candidates, who instead used their advertisin­g to insist that the Democratic Party would be in the hands of more polarizing figures on the left such as Sen. Bernie Sanders.

Unlike the last two Democrats who defeated incumbents after voters tired of Republican leadership, Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton, Biden will not arrive in the capital as a youthful outsider. Instead, he will fill out a Democratic leadership triumvirat­e, which includes House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Sen. Charles Schumer, of lawmakers who are 70 or older.

Biden alluded to himself during the campaign as a transition­al figure who would bring the country out of a crisis and then make way for a new generation. But he has privately rejected suggestion­s that he commit to serving just a single term, viewing that as an instant guarantee of lame-duck status.

One of the most significan­t tests of Biden’s presidency will be in how he navigates the widening divisions in his party.

He may enjoy a honeymoon, because of both the scale of the problems he is grappling with and the president he defeated.

This election represente­d the culminatio­n of nearly four years of activism organized around opposing Trump, a movement that began with the Women’s March the day after his inaugurati­on. Indeed, Biden’s election appeared less the unique achievemen­t of a political standard-bearer than the apex of a political wave touched off by the 2016 election.

But Trump’s job approval rating never hit 50 percent and, when the coronaviru­s spread and Biden claimed the Democratic nomination, the president’s hopes of running with a booming economy evaporated.

 ?? Tasos Katopodis / Getty Images ?? President-elect Joe Biden hugs his granddaugh­ter on stage after Biden's address to the nation from the Chase Center Saturday in Wilmington, Del., as his wife, Jill Biden, looks on.
Tasos Katopodis / Getty Images President-elect Joe Biden hugs his granddaugh­ter on stage after Biden's address to the nation from the Chase Center Saturday in Wilmington, Del., as his wife, Jill Biden, looks on.
 ?? Tasos Katopodis / Getty Images ?? President-elect Joe Biden, Jill Biden, Vice President-elect Kamala Harris and husband Doug Emhoff wave to the crowd on stage after Biden's address to the nation Saturday.
Tasos Katopodis / Getty Images President-elect Joe Biden, Jill Biden, Vice President-elect Kamala Harris and husband Doug Emhoff wave to the crowd on stage after Biden's address to the nation Saturday.
 ?? Win Mcnamee / Getty Images ?? President-elect Joe Biden kisses his grandchild as they watch fireworks Saturday after Biden addressed the nation.
Win Mcnamee / Getty Images President-elect Joe Biden kisses his grandchild as they watch fireworks Saturday after Biden addressed the nation.

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