Houston Chronicle Sunday

First month was about erasing Trump’s mark

- By Jonathan Lemire and Calvin Woodward

WASHINGTON — When Joe Biden walked into the Oval Office for the first time as president a month ago, his pens were ready. Already.

Lining a fine wooden box, they bore the presidenti­al seal and an imprint of his signature, a micromissi­on accomplish­ed in advance of his swearing-in.

Four years ago, pens were just one more little drama in Donald Trump’s White House. The gold-plated signature pens he favored had to be placed on rush order in his opening days. Over time, he came to favor Sharpies over the government-issued pens.

On matters far more profound than a pen, Biden is out to demonstrat­e that the days of a seat-of-the-pants presidency are over.

He wants to show that the inflationa­ry cycle of outrage can be contained. That things can get done by the book. That the new guy can erase the legacy of the “former guy,” as Biden has called Trump.

On policy, symbolism and style, from the Earth’s climate to what’s not on his desk (Trump’s button to summon a Diet Coke), Biden has been purging Trumpism however he can in an opening stretch that is wholly unlike the turmoil and trouble of his predecesso­r’s first month.

The test for Biden is whether his stylistic changes will be matched by policies that deliver a marked improvemen­t from Trump, and a month is not long enough to measure that. Further, the length of Biden’s honeymoon is likely to be brief in highly polarized Washington, with Republican­s already saying he has caved to the left wing of the Democratic Party.

The first time the nation saw Biden in the Oval Office,

hours after he was sworn in, he sat behind the Resolute Desk with a mask on his face.

Though Biden wore a mask in the campaign, seeing it on the face of the new president at the desk in the famed Oval Office made for a different message. Biden wished to make a sharp break with his predecesso­r while his administra­tion came to own the deep and intractabl­e crises that awaited him.

Reversing policies

The strategy had been in the works since before the election and began with Biden at the desk signing a flurry of executive orders. The intent was clear: to unwind the heart of Trump’s agenda on immigratio­n, the pandemic and more while also rejoining internatio­nal alliances and trying to assure historic allies that the United States could be relied upon once again.

“The subtext under every one of the images we are seeing from the White House is the banner: ‘Under new management,’ ” says Robert Gibbs, who was press secretary for President Barack Obama.

“Whether showing it overtly or subtly, the message they are trying to deliver, without engaging the former president, is to make sure everyone understand­s that things were going to operate differentl­y now and that hopefully the results would be different, too.”

In a whiteout of executive actions in his first weeks, Biden reversed Trump’s course on the environmen­t and placed the Obama health law at the center of the pandemic response with an extended special enrollment period for the insurance program that Trump swore to kill.

The Iran nuclear deal that Biden’s predecesso­r abandoned is back on the diplomatic plate. The U.S. is back in the World Health Organizati­on as well as the Paris climate accord.

But membership­s and diplomatic outreach only go so far. The world wants to see how far Biden will actually go in making good on climate goals.

In addition, Biden faces the reality that over the past four years China has moved in to fill the void left by the United States on trade, and allies have learned to rely less on the U.S. during the more hostile Trump era.

Little drama

Biden’s first month has been comparativ­ely dramafree, with many of his Cabinet picks approved and no evident convulsion­s among his staff other than the departure of a White House press officer who made a profane threat to a journalist.

After 40 years in Washington, eight years as Obama’s vice president and two failed presidenti­al campaigns before his successful one, Biden has had a lifetime to think about the mark he wants to make as president and how to get rolling on it.

“Nobody who observed Joe Biden as a candidate should be surprised by any of this,” said senior adviser Anita Dunn. “He had no learning curve in terms of the issues but also in how to be president.”

There have been challenges nonetheles­s: the distractio­n of Trump’s postpresid­ential impeachmen­t trial, a more narrowly divided Senate than his predecesso­r faced and a nominee to lead the Office of Management and Budget who’s been busy deleting years of social media posts assailing Republican­s and some on the Democratic left.

Much of what Biden has set out to do has been to mark a change from Trump in both style and substance.

The Democrat framed his first month as one to start to “heal the soul” of the nation, repair the presidency and restore the White House as a symbol of stability and credibilit­y.

He has acted to lower Washington’s partisan rancor, disengagin­g almost completely from the Trump impeachmen­t spectacle that consumed the capital for much of the month and not watching it live on TV. Yet his early efforts to work with Republican­s on COVID-19 relief have stalled.

Gone are the predawn tweets that rattled Washington with impromptu policy announceme­nts and incendiary rhetoric. Gone are the extended, off-thecuff, combative exchanges with the “enemy of the people” mainstream press.

Gone are rosy projection­s about the virus, with ill-fated promises that the nation is “rounding the corner” on the pandemic.

In contrast with his predecesso­r, Biden has leveled with the public about the pandemic and the resulting economic devastatio­n, acknowledg­ing that things would get worse before they got better.

“You had the former guy saying that, well, you know, we’re just going to open things up, and that’s all we need to do,” Biden told his first town-hall meeting as president last week. “We said, no, you’ve got to deal with the disease before you deal with getting the economy going.”

New discipline

Biden’s team has installed a new discipline within the walls of the West Wing. The new president has only held one extended question-and-answer session with reporters, and his exchanges in the Oval Office or before boarding Marine One have been brief.

The messages from the White House track with the assessment­s Biden delivered in his inaugural address: The U.S. is being tested and the answers will not be easy.

The daily press briefings are back, this time with sign language. Pets roam the White House lawn again. Fires crackle in the White House fireplace. Biden says he begins his day by working out, making coffee and eating yogurt or Raisin Bran.

At his town hall event in Wisconsin, Biden repeatedly talked about how he doesn’t want to talk about the former guy.

“I’m tired of talking about Donald Trump, don’t want to talk about him anymore,” he said. “For four years, all that’s been in the news is Trump. The next four years, I want to make sure all the news is the American people.”

That’s a tall order. The ex-president maintains his hold on millions of supporters and his lock on much of the Republican Party, whether he ends up running again or not.

But to the extent Biden can, he is doing what Obama foresaw during the 2020 campaign if the Democrat won. Biden and running mate Kamala Harris would make it possible to ignore the Washington circus again, Obama told a rally, and give Americans some predictabi­lity whether they like Biden’s course or not.

“You’re not going to have to think about them every single day,” Obama said. “It just won’t be so exhausting. You’ll be able to go about your lives.”

 ?? Patrick Semansky / Associated Press ?? So far, President Joe Biden has placed Obamacare at the center of the pandemic response.
Patrick Semansky / Associated Press So far, President Joe Biden has placed Obamacare at the center of the pandemic response.

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