Chattanooga Times Free Press

PRESIDENT-ELECT BIDEN HAS WHAT AMERICA NEEDS

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When Joe Biden first ran for the U.S. Senate from Delaware in 1972, one of his campaign’s leaflets brandished encomiums from Democratic senators across the party’s ideologica­l spectrum.

It was a shrewd piece of politics, elevating a 29-year old county council member to national status, at least on paper. And it spoke to every kind of Democrat in a year when a party badly divided by the Vietnam War and shaken by the gales of cultural conflict went down to a disastrous defeat at the hands of Richard Nixon.

Biden managed to run well ahead of the national ticket and defeated twoterm Republican incumbent Sen. J. Caleb Boggs, not so much by attacking him as by suggesting that his time had passed. “He understand­s what’s happening today” was a Biden tag line.

Who can know how many Delaware voters imagined that the young, ambitious man they were sending to Washington would one day reach the White House? But what they saw were the gifts and the habits that culminated on Saturday in Biden’s election as the 46th president of the United States.

The unifier of 1972 brought a party of wide philosophi­cal diversity together in 2020, helped immensely by every faction’s antipathy toward President Donald Trump. A man whose gifts for empathy were honed by his own suffering, Biden was also a politician’s politician. He remembered birthdays, attended funerals, called sick constituen­ts in the hospital, even phoned parents whose children he worked with to tell them how brilliant their kids were — a surefire way to forge lifelong appreciati­on.

If all this was shrewd, it also reflected the gregarious­ness of a lover of Irish poets who, when he spoke to anyone, could go on and on — and on and on — because he plain likes to communicat­e.

After flirting with other 2020 talents, rank-and-file Democrats settled on Biden in droves after his victory in the South Carolina primary. They saw in him a man who could rally Black Americans and suburban moderates who loathed Trump, but also win back White non-college voters who could identify with “working class Joe.”

He seemed the right guy to face Trump — and Trump feared exactly that.

Biden will need all his coalition-building skills and gifts for outreach as he assumes the presidency in the midst of a pandemic, a severe economic downturn, a new revolution for racial justice and a dangerousl­y warming planet.

Having run on a very progressiv­e program, he will confront enormous headwinds if Republican­s maintain their hold on the Senate by winning at least one of the two January runoffs for seats in Georgia. Biden has always prided himself on his ability to work with Republican­s. But he faces a party far more ideologica­lly rigid than the one he first encountere­d as a young senator in 1973. It will be emboldened by its down-ballot successes this year.

Yet Biden will also take office as someone accustomed to being underestim­ated. He will soon turn 78 and has little to lose. Much of his program — whether to build infrastruc­ture, expand health coverage, enhance child care, and raise the wages of the poor and the middle class — is broadly popular.

In one of his final addresses before the election, Biden quoted a speech that Franklin D. Roosevelt wrote but never got to deliver in which FDR lifted up the need to “cultivate the science of human relationsh­ips — the ability of all peoples, of all kinds, to live together and work together.”

From his earliest campaign to his two failed quests for the presidency and through all those funerals and birthdays and friendly phone calls, Biden has made “the science of human relationsh­ips” his chosen field. This has earned him an opportunit­y Roosevelt would recognize: to heal a nation ailing in body and spirit by renewing its capacity for common missions and shared aspiration­s.

 ?? E. J. Dionne ??
E. J. Dionne

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