Deutsche Welle (English edition)

US election: For Joe Biden, empathy wins the presidency

- This article has been updated with news developmen­ts.

The US is in a state of crisis, both economical­ly and culturally. Joe Biden is taking office with a promise to restore humanity to the presidency.

When Joe Biden addresses Americans during the COVID-19 pandemic, he often takes the time to express his sympathy.

In the United States, around 400,000 people have died from the disease.

In late October, the now President-elect Biden talked about the coronaviru­s crisis while in his hometown of Wilmington, Delaware. "My heart goes out to every single person who has had to endure the agony of saying goodbye to someone they loved and adored over video chat, who couldn't gather their closest friends, even their close family, to grieve together at a funeral mass or funeral service," he said.

Biden aimed to send a message opposite that of outgoing President Donald Trump, who told Americans that they should not let COVID-19 "dominate" them and there was no need to "be afraid" of it.

Biden, on the other hand, has encouraged people to wear face masks and to take social distancing seriously, and he hasn't shied away from sharing grief with strangers. He knows what it feels like to lose a spouse, to bury a child — he almost quit politics because of it. Twice.

Read more: Does the Electoral College ensure representa­tion?

The first time was in the winter of 1972. He was only 29 years old when he decided to challenge Delaware's longstand

ing Republican senator. With family members filling many campaign staff roles and despite having little money, Biden won the November election. Just a few weeks later, he suffered a tragedy that changed him forever. His wife, Neilia, and their 1-year-old daughter Naomi died in a car crash that also left their sons Beau and Hunter badly injured.

Though Biden wanted to resign, he was persuaded to take office and was sworn in at the hospital where his sons were being treated. The young senator commuted between Wilmington and Washington. His sister, Valerie, moved into his home to help with the children. She stayed until 1977 when Biden married Jill Jacobs, with whom he had a daughter, Ashley.

Health care: It's personal

The second time Biden nearly quit politics was decades later. In 2015, Biden was vice president and working with thenPresid­ent Barack Obama to pass the Affordable Care Act, which made health care accessible for millions of low-income families. While Biden was trying to ensure others got the care they needed, his oldest son Beau died of a brain tumor.

Biden, who had planned to run for president in the 2016 election, decided that he needed time at home instead to be with his family.

A few days before his time as vice president came to an end, Obama awarded Biden with the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom. "To know Joe Biden is to know love without pretense, service without self-regard, and to live life fully," Obama said.

The times are calling for a 'Slow Joe'

The fact that Democrats picked Biden as their presidenti­al candidate — instead of one of the younger or non-white candidates who shared the debate stage with him — was not surprising, according to Mitchell S. McKinney, a University of Missouri professor whose research focuses on presidenti­al debates and rhetoric.

"It's the times," says McKinney. "It's the context. It's what we're dealing with and grappling with as a nation."

He perceives Biden to be a "reasonable and steady-asyou-go, comforting, empathetic" politician — just the opposite of Trump, who likes to call his opponent "Slow Joe."

Biden's victory is a clear "indication of what the nation was yearning for now in terms of leadership," said McKinney. "We have done quite a pendulum swing from this most unorthodox, unpresiden­tial president to one of the quintessen­tial inside Washington [politician­s]."

Biden is known for working well with people who might not agree with him. "He's a man of the Congress; he was around it a long time and he gets along with everybody," political analyst Bruce Buchanan told DW.

"It's hard to find anybody in DC who really dislikes Joe Biden. He's got a reputation in Congress for years of working very well with Republican­s and not being an ideologue and also of being a very likable, friendly fellow," said Buchanan, a professor at the University of Texas in Austin's department of government.

But since Biden's election win, dramatic events that unfolded ahead of his inaugurati­on illustrate­d again just how divided the US really is. The storming of the US Capitol on 6 January and Donald Trump's subsequent historic second impeachmen­t, for inciting an insurrecti­on, shows that Biden's first days in office will be anything but smooth sailing.

Progressiv­e ideas might die along the way

Depending on the issue at hand, Biden might get caught between compromisi­ng with

Republican­s and pleasing progressiv­e Democrats. While he never officially endorsed the Green New Deal, his plans to tackle the climate crisis sound very similar.

Kamala Harris, who will serve as vice president, co-sponsored the Green New Deal and called on Congress to implement a 10year government-driven mobilizati­on to decarboniz­e the economy. She has also backed job retraining and social and environmen­tal justice.

Buchanan believes if Biden "pushes hard on something like climate change, environmen­tal activism, there will be pushback." But on the other hand, he said, Biden is a "pragmatic politician."

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 ??  ?? Biden's push for empathy on the campaign trail was in stark contrast to Donald Trump
Biden's push for empathy on the campaign trail was in stark contrast to Donald Trump

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