Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

A CALL FOR HEALING

Biden takes office today as COVID toll tops 400K, nation still reels from siege

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WASHINGTON » Hours from inaugurati­on, President-elect Joe Biden paused on what might have been his triumphal entrance to Washington Tuesday evening to mark instead the national tragedy of the coronaviru­s pandemic with a moment of collective grief for Americans lost.

His arrival coincided with the awful news that the U.S. death toll had surpassed 400,000 in the worst public health crisis in more than a century — a crisis Biden now will be charged with controllin­g.

“To heal we must remember,” the incoming president told the nation at a sunset ceremony at the foot of the Lincoln Memorial.

Four hundred lights representi­ng each thousand of the pandemic’s victims were illuminate­d behind him around the monument’s Reflecting Pool.

“Between sundown and dusk, let us shine the lights into the darkness ... and remember all who we lost,” Biden said.

The sober moment on the

eve of Biden’s inaugurati­on — typically a celebrator­y time in Washington when the nation marks the democratic tradition of a peaceful transfer of power — was a measure of the enormity of loss for the nation.

During his brief remarks, Biden faced the larger-than life statue of Abraham Lincoln, the Civil War president who served as more than 600,000 Americans died. As he turned to walk away at the conclusion of the vigil, he faced the black granite wall listing the 58,000plus Americans who perished in the Vietnam War.

Biden was joined by Vice President-elect Kamala Harris, who spoke of the collective anguish of the nation, a not-so-subtle admonishme­nt of outgoing President Donald Trump, who has spoken sparingly about the pandemic in recent months.

“For many months we have grieved by ourselves,” said Harris, who will make history as the first woman to serve as vice president when she’s sworn in. “Tonight, we grieve and begin healing together.”

Beyond the pandemic, Biden faces no shortage of problems when he takes the reins at the White House. The nation also is on its economic heels because of high unemployme­nt, and there is deep political division and immediate concern about more violence following the deadly Jan. 6 siege of the U.S. Capitol.

Biden, an avid fan of Amtrak who took the train thousands of times between his home in Delaware and Washington during his decades in the Senate, had planned to take a train into Washington ahead of Wednesday’s Inaugurati­on Day but scratched that plan in the aftermath of the Capitol riot.

He instead flew into Joint Base Andrews, just outside the capital, and then motorcaded into fortress D.C. — a city that’s been flooded by some 25,000 National Guard troops guarding a Capitol, White House and National Mall that are wrapped in a maze of barricades and tall fencing.

“These are dark times,” Biden told supporters in an emotional sendoff in Delaware. “But there’s always light.”

Biden, who ran for the presidency as a cool head who could get things done, plans to issue a series of executive orders on Day 1 — including reversing Trump’s effort to leave the Paris climate accord, canceling Trump’s travel ban on visitors from several predominan­tly Muslim countries, and extending pandemic-era limits on evictions and student loan payments.

Trump won’t attend Biden’s inaugurati­on, the first outgoing president to skip the ceremony since Andrew Johnson more than 150 years ago.

The White House released a farewell video from Trump just as Biden landed at Andrews. Trump, who has repeatedly and falsely claimed widespread fraud led to his election loss, extended “best wishes” to the incoming administra­tion in his nearly 20-minute address but did not utter Biden’s name.

Trump also spent some of his last time in the White House huddled with advisers weighing 11thhour pardons and grants of clemency. He planned to depart from Washington Wednesday morning in a grand airbase ceremony that he helped plan.

Biden, at his Delaware farewell, held at the National Guard/Reserve Center named after his late son, Beau, paid tribute to his home state. After his remarks, he stopped and chatted with friends and well-wishers in the crowd, much as he had at Iowa rope lines at the start of his long campaign journey.

“I’ll always be a proud son of the state of Delaware,” Biden said, struggling to hold back tears as he delivered brief remarks.

Inaugural organizers this week finished installing some 200,000 U.S., state and territoria­l flags on the National Mall, a display representi­ng the American people who couldn’t come to the inaugurati­on, which is tightly limited under security and COVID restrictio­ns.

The display also was a reminder of all the president-elect faces as he looks to steer the nation through the pandemic with infections and deaths soaring.

Out of the starting gate, Biden and his team are intent on moving quickly to speed distributi­on of vaccinatio­ns to anxious Americans and pass his $1.9 trillion virus relief package, which includes quick payments to many people and an increase in the minimum wage to $15 an hour.

Biden also plans to unveil a sweeping immigratio­n bill on the first day of his administra­tion, hoping to provide an eightyear path to citizenshi­p for an estimated 11 million people living in the U.S. without legal status. That would be a major reversal from the Trump administra­tion’s tight immigratio­n policies.

Some leading Republican­s already have balked at Biden’s immigratio­n plan. “There are many issues I think we can work cooperativ­ely with President-elect Biden, but a blanket amnesty for people who are here unlawfully isn’t going to be one of them,” said Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., often a central player in Senate immigratio­n battles.

Many of Biden’s legislativ­e ambitions could be tempered by the hard numbers he faces on Capitol Hill, where Democrats hold narrow majorities in both the Senate and House.

His hopes to press forward with an avalanche of legislatio­n in his first 100 days could also be slowed by an impeachmen­t trial of Trump.

Aides say Biden will use Wednesday’s inaugural address — one that will be delivered in front of an unusually small in-person group because of virus protocols and security concerns and is expected to run only 20 to 30 minutes — to call for American unity and offer an optimistic message that Americans can get past the dark moment by working together.

To that end, he extended invitation­s to Congress’ top four Republican and Democratic leaders to attend Mass with him at St. Matthew’s Cathedral ahead of the inaugurati­on ceremony.

Ahead of Biden’s arrival in the nation’s capital Tuesday, 12 U.S. Army National Guard members were removed from the presidenti­al inaugurati­on security mission after they were found to have ties with right-wing militia groups or posted extremist views online, according to two U.S. officials. There was no threat to Biden, they said.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President-elect Joe Biden speaks during a COVID-19 memorial ceremony Tuesday evening in Washington, D.C., with the Reflecting Pool and Washington Monument behind him. At right is Biden’s wife, Jill.
ALEX BRANDON — ASSOCIATED PRESS President-elect Joe Biden speaks during a COVID-19 memorial ceremony Tuesday evening in Washington, D.C., with the Reflecting Pool and Washington Monument behind him. At right is Biden’s wife, Jill.

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