Post-Tribune

The dangerous seduction of back to ‘normal’

- Robert B. Reich

“Life is going to return to normal,” Joe Biden promised last week in a Thanksgivi­ng address to the nation. He was talking about life after COVID-19, but you could be forgiven if you thought he was also making a promise about life after Donald Trump.

It’s almost impossible to separate the two. To the extent that voters gave Biden a mandate, it was to end both scourges and make America normal again.

Despite the grim resurgence of COVID19, Dr. Anthony Fauci — the public health official Trump ignored and then muzzled, with whom Biden’s staff is now conferring — sounded guardedly optimistic last week. He said vaccines will allow “a gradual accrual of more normality as the weeks and the months go by as we get well into 2021.”

Normal. You could almost hear America’s giant sigh of relief, similar to the one felt when Trump implicitly conceded the election by allowing the transition to begin.

It is comforting to think of both COVID - 19 and Trump as intrusions into normality, aberration­s from routines that prevailed before.

When Biden entered the presidenti­al race last year; he said history would look back on Trump as an "aberrant moment in time."

The end of both aberration­s conjures up a former America that, by contrast, might appear quiet and safe, even boring.

Biden's early choices for his Cabinet and senior staff fit the same mold — "all boring picks," tweeted the Atlantic's Graeme Wood, referring to Bid en's foreign policy team, "who, if you shook them awake and appointed them in the middle of the night at any time in the last decade, could have reported to their new jobs and started work competentl­y by dawn"

Hallelujah.

All of Biden's designees, including Janet Yellen for Treasury secretary and Antony Blinken for secretary of state, are experience­d and competent — refreshing, especially after Trump's goon squads.

They also stand out for their abilities not to stand out There is no firebrand among them, no Elizabeth Warren or Bernie Sand-ers. For the same reasons, they're unlikely to stir strong opposition from Republican­s — a necessity for Senate confirmati­on, partic-ularly if Democrats fail to win the two Senate runoffs in Georgia on Jan. 5. Boring, reassuring, normal — these are Biden's great strengths. But he needs to be carefuL They could also be his great weak-nesses. That's because any return to "normal" would be disastrous for America. Normal led to Trump. Normal led to the coronaviru­s. Normal is four decades of stagnant wages and widening inequality when almost all economic gains went to the top. Normal is 40 years of shredded safety nets, and the most expensive but least adequate health care system in the modern world. Normal is worsening police brutality. Normal is a GOP that for years has been actively suppressin­g minority votes and embracing white supremacis­ts. Normal is a Democratic Party that for years has been abandoning the working class. Given the road we were on, Trump and COVID-19 were not aberration­s. They were inevitabil­ities. The moment we are now in — with Trump virtually gone, Biden assembling his Cabinet, and most of the nation starting to feel a bit of relief — is a temporary reprieve.

If the underlying trends don’t change, after Biden we could have Trumps as far as the eye can see. And health and environmen­tal crises that make the coronaviru­s another step toward Armageddon.

Hence the paradox. America wants to return to a reassuring normal, but Biden can’t allow it. Complacenc­y would be deadly. He has to both calm the waters and stir the pot.

It’s a mistake to see this challenge as placating the progressiv­e wing of the Democratic Party. It’s about dealing with problems that have worsened for decades and if left unattended much longer will be enormously destructiv­e.

So the central question: In an exhausted and divided America that desperatel­y wants a return to normal, can Biden find the energy and political will for bold changes that are imperative?

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