Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Return to decency needed as Trump exits

- Baltimore Sun Editorial Board

Joe Biden and Kamala Harris today take their respective oaths of office to become the nation’s next president and vice president. Many Americans will surely breathe some collective sigh of relief.

The past two months, and especially the past two weeks, have been the chaotic crescendo of a tumultuous presidency leaving in its wake — and this is an abbreviate­d list — Washington, D.C., in military lockdown with roadblocks and barricades and as many as 25,000 National Guard troops keeping order; the staggering death toll of the covid-19 pandemic now projected to reach a half-million in the U.S. by mid-February as the too-slow vaccine distributi­on program staggers on; and, perhaps most importantl­y, a strong sense that U.S. democracy, if not outright broken, has been dealt a serious blow by one selfish man who could not accept defeat.

“My fellow Americans, our long national nightmare is over.” Those were the words Gerald Ford used at his inaugurati­on when he succeeded Richard Nixon, who resigned from office in 1974. Nearly 47 years later, the nightmare is demonstrab­ly worse.

Ford inherited a nation still reeling from the Watergate scandal and a disgraced Spiro Agnew, but without a storming of the U.S. Senate chambers, a legacy of constant misreprese­ntation and scheming, a historic pandemic and a level of political polarizati­on unmatched in the modern era. President Donald Trump is leaving office like a drugged-up rock star leaves a hotel room — in a complete mess and seemingly proud of it.

How fitting that the latest opinion surveys show Trump’s approval rating as the lowest of any president ever polled. That he apparently plans not to attend his successor’s inaugurati­on, the first such absence in a century and a half of presidenti­al transition­s, is disgracefu­l but somehow fitting in what it says about his moral character.

Under different circumstan­ces, the country’s desire for a replacemen­t in the Oval Office would seem a political advantage. But, alas, the well of political opinion seems too poisoned for that. Biden has promised to make changes, not just in policy but in perspectiv­e: a president who governs all, not just his devout supporters; a president who prizes his appointees’ expertise, not just their slavish devotion; a president willing to work with Congress, not just his political allies; a president who takes the pandemic seriously enough to wear a mask and redouble federal efforts to give vaccinatio­ns to more Americans, not just shift blame to others.

The 78-year-old Scranton, Pa., native has a comforting, grandfathe­rly presence that the nation could surely use right now after four years of taunts and tantrums. But where some see a Jimmy Stewart figure, Trump supporters see Claude Rains, a doddering remnant of Washington insider elites.

Of course, today will be filled with outreach and gesture, with calls for unificatio­n, turning over a new leaf, rounding a corner. The Biden agenda is surely ambitious, featuring a stronger economic stimulus, renewed attention to climate change, a push for greater equality and fairness, a return to internatio­nal coalition-building to address global problems, and a repeal of tax cuts for the rich. But he has also wisely spoken of making the covid-19 pandemic the center of his administra­tion’s initial focus.

Surely, there will be a flurry of executive orders reversing some of the more heinous Trump executive actions, and Biden has promised to propose major legislatio­n on immigratio­n. But pushing for a better, swifter and more compassion­ate (properly memorializ­ing the dead, for example) response to the pandemic on Day 1 would seem the right move. Sometimes, it takes a funeral, or perhaps a stalled vaccinatio­n rollout, to bring a family together.

Most Americans probably don’t care all that much about inaugural balls or the other ceremonial trappings of Inaugurati­on Day. Their absence won’t make much difference. What many would truly, greatly, deeply appreciate is some return to normalcy, to rational behavior, to less shouting and more respectful conversati­on. And no white supremacis­ts dressed in military gear and toting guns to attack Washington or any state capital.

Decency is what Biden and Harris promised, and it’s likely what Americans would appreciate most right now, Harris’ historic achievemen­t as the first woman to hold her post notwithsta­nding. And, of course, a quicker, safer end to the pandemic.

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