Jan 15, 2021
With searing images of mob violence at the U.S. Capitol fresh in memory, Joe Biden comes to the presidency as a potential healer of divisions and binder up of wounds. Yet his own prior commitments could prevent him from succeeding in those roles.
No matter how you feel about Biden, that would be bad news, not just for him but for a nation desperate for unity in the wake of shocking evidence of how deeply divided it really is.
Certainly Biden recognizes the fractured state of the country. Shortly before demonstrators invaded the Capitol, he said Americans "demand action and they want unity." Then he added "we can deliver both." But barring a change of heart, his ideological baggage on social issues including abortion threatens to keep divided Americans' passions at boiling point.
It's not all his doing of course. President Trump's strident rhetoric and legal maneuvering to overturn the November vote--despite repeated rebuffs by dozens of courts--bore bitter fruit in the outrage at the Capitol and create a pervading mood of suspicion ominously unlike the restored comity that customarily follows elections.