Boston Herald

Tell us something good

Battered nation deserves upbeat message from Biden

- Joe BATTENFELD

President Biden should deliver a positive, forwardloo­king address to the nation that highlights the reawakenin­g of America, the successful vaccinatio­n program and financial relief from the newly passed $1.9 trillion stimulus bill.

Yes, Biden is known as the “consoler-in-chief” but he should avoid setting too somber and negative a tone on the one year anniversar­y of the coronaviru­s lockdown. And spare us from yet another self-serving political speech.

It wouldn’t hurt to channel a little Joel Osteen, the TV pastor known for his life-affirming, postive messages who has a following of millions of people.

Americans want to look forward to better days, warmer weather, a rapid rise in vaccinatio­ns and a return to semi-normalcy — not just rehash the devastatio­n COVID-19 has wreaked on the country.

In his speech on Thursday night, Biden should definitely pay tribute to the hundreds of thousands lost to the pandemic and the heroic first responders and doctors, nurses and medical personnel who risked their lives to save others.

But what America needs right now is a literal and figurative shot in the arm. We’ve been through a year of suffering, pain and depression that has triggered a national mental health crisis, especially for children and teens who have been deprived of in-person schooling.

Just for our own psyche, we need to be lifted up.

Whether Biden can pull it off is a whole other question.

He will have a teleprompt­er to get him through the address, so there shouldn’t be any gaffes or wandering sentences. And no questions from the media. The networks are pushing back their prime-time offerings to make way for Biden’s 8 p.m. address, which is expected to clock in at under a half hour.

It’s a chance for the 78year-old Biden to show he can lead the nation through an economic and medical recovery that actually started before he took office.

Not that he will give credit to Donald Trump for anything.

Biden has stubbornly refused to acknowledg­e that the miraculous vaccinatio­n program was launched by Trump – so don’t expect to hear that on Thursday night.

Expect to hear Biden instead take a victory lap for the passage of the massive stimulus bill that will be delivering $1,400 checks to those in need. It was the first major legislativ­e accomplish­ment of his presidency, and showed Democrats — despite the fracture in the party between progressiv­es and moderates — could come together to pass the bill.

But it was also passed without Republican support, underscori­ng the partisan divide in the country.

Biden promised to unite America but has done little uniting so far, instead relying on the same old partisan rhetoric and tactics that have dominated Washington politics for decades.

And for Republican­s and others who wish to avoid another self-serving political speech, there’s always Netflix.

 ?? gETTy IMAgES ?? WE KNOW, WE KNOW: President Biden speaks Wednesday at an event in Washington.
gETTy IMAgES WE KNOW, WE KNOW: President Biden speaks Wednesday at an event in Washington.
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