Stephen Collinson and Caitlin Hu
'Let this grim era of demonization in America begin to end'
The world took a momentous turn at 11:24 a.m. ET on Saturday: In the instant that CNN projected Joe Biden would become the 46th president, the United States embarked on a starkly different road than the one it would have barreled down had President Donald Trump won a second term.
Presidential
attacks on democratic institutions, science and the vulnerable,
including immigrants and religious minorities, will stop. The White
House will stop being the country’s biggest source of lies. America will
no longer have a President who uses division as an instrument of power.
Governance and foreign policy will not be made by tweet. Biden has
already announced a task force to fight the worsening pandemic. And the
burden of Trump’s racial fear-mongering will be lifted from Americans of
color.
Trump’s
demagogic presidency will become an aberration in American history,
rather than a new foundation that affronts the country’s bedrock values.
Fears that a second Trump term would destroy NATO and buckle America’s
role as an exemplar of democratic values will not materialize, however
treacherous the world remains. The US will try to do something about a
warming planet. Trump’s defeat caused relief abroad, where the lives of
people who have no capacity to influence American power are shaped by
the behemoth between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.
But
explosions of joy on the streets of cities like Philadelphia and
Atlanta where citizens voted in extraordinary numbers were not shared in
the vast American heartland. More than 70 million Americans voted for
Trump, and followed him with an intensity that matched the antipathy
felt by his critics. Those critics always struggled to understand how
friends and relatives who love him rationalize his belligerence, lying
and bigotry. But Trump partisans saw in his chaos a scourge of "elites,"
who they believe patronized them and their values.
Trump spoke for vast numbers of Americans who believed their government’s embrace of globalization destroyed their livelihoods. Growing secularism and liberal social reforms convinced others that their Christian faith was threatened. The fact that Republicans may cling onto the Senate and cut the Democratic majority in the House suggests that while many conservatives are tired of Trump’s antics, they're not done with his policies.
While
Trump will soon be gone, the political dislocation he tapped to win the
presidency in 2016 endures. His refusal to concede defeat now will
foment a grassroots outrage that could strangle Biden’s presidency. The
aftermath of the election is serving only to highlight internal
estrangement in the Disunited States of America. Biden
recognizes the choleric forces rocking the nation he will lead in 73
days -- but whether he can heal them will be the story of his
presidency. (CNN)
No comments:
Post a Comment