Opinion Advocates for ideas and draws conclusions based on the author/producerβs interpretation of facts and data.
Unity Is Impossible Without Accountability
President Joseph R. Biden Jr. took the oath of office shortly before noon Eastern time on Wednesday, and in his low-key manner ended an era in which the evil in the U.S. government could not be overestimated, and started a new one that promises to be better.
Itβs now up to Biden and his incoming team to make sure they use their powers for good. Simply not being a mendacious and corrupt would-be autocrat is an awfully low bar to reach. The times call for inspired leadership and an aggressive platform of reform.
There have already been some indications that Biden understands this. Political speeches are usually more symbolic and aspirational than grounded in reality, but symbols do matter. In his , Biden name-checked some critical issues that progressives have been pushing for years: systemic racism, White supremacy, the climate crisis, and the United Statesβ loss of standing around the world.
But he also mentioned βunityβ eight times, and therein lies the challenge this new administration is going to face.
For a career Washington politician, Biden has managed to remain largely consistent in his politics, hewing toward wherever the political center of the Democratic Party was at any given moment, and using his affable charm to work across the aisle to get policy done.
Those days are gone, and itβs best Biden recognize that, not least because of the then-unprecedented hostility and obstructionism he saw from Republicans when he served as vice president in Barack Obamaβs administration.
There needs to be a very public accounting of the damage done, and criminal charges should be brought where warranted, no matter whose sense of decorum might be upset.
Since that time, the Republican Party has shown itself to be an extremist group opposed to actual democracy. When the GOPβs Congressional caucus had the opportunity a week ago to say that it was, you know, wrong for a sitting president to instigate a violent insurrection against the government, And a significant number of Senate Republicans likewise will not vote to convict the former president.
Biden has a majority in Congressβone that is full of self-important and triangulating career pols who sometimes need to be dragged kicking and screaming into serving the people rather than their donors. The Democratsβ razor-thin majority includes everyone from progressives like U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders and U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, to red-state moderates like U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin and U.S.Rep. Henry Cuellar.
The high likelihood of Biden not seeking a second term in 2024 could help free him from the grip that money has on politics, but heβs still going to have to be the leader of a party prone to infighting and interest-group politics. That means getting those moderates on board for real reform, and getting progressives to accept results that might be less than what theyβd hoped for.
Yet the Democratic Party also is not the same as it was even four years ago. The Congressional Progressive Caucus, chaired by U.S. Reps. Pramila Jayapal and Mark Pocan, has 95 members, making it the , and comprises 42% of the Democratsβ House membership. Their influence on policy in the new administration will be substantial.
In this era of extreme partisanship, βunityβ is a meaningless concept, especially when one of the two parties has become opposed to the basic idea that the people should be able to select their leaders in a free and fair manner.
And one word was missing from Bidenβs speech: accountability.
We just suffered four years of endemic, overt corruption, and cruelty, overseen by a president who by any reasonable measure is a , a , a , and a . We saw the creation of , deliberate attempts to , the that included , and the use of the , including an on Jan. 6. Those were only some of the most egregious examples of malicious lawlessness in the past four years.
There can be no unity without accountability for those crimes. And yet the pressure will now be enormousβon Bidenβs administration, on Congressional leaders, on national mediaβto β,β β,β and β.β
Thereβs no unity without accountability, and extending a hand to those who would just as soon stab it is the height of foolishness.
The problem is, we are still a nation in crisis. A far-right-wing movement that sought to overthrow our democracy extends not just to those who breached the Capitol building, but to those who enabled and supported them, including members of Congress and the former president and his administration. If they remain unpunished, the message that will be heard is not βunity,β but βitβs just politics as usual.β
Iβd like to think Biden was sincere when he said, βIf we do this, then when our days are through, our children and our children’s children will say of us: They gave their best, they did their duty, they healed a broken land.β But that means we canβt let our response to the past four years to be politics as usual. There needs to be a very public accounting of the damage done, and criminal charges should be brought where warranted, no matter whose sense of decorum might be upset.
Compelling evidence has emerged that the violent mob may have had . Accountability for them may look like expulsion, at the bare minimum. When Congress members like Ocasio-Cortez were fearful of being killed not just by rioters, but , thatβs an indication that a full house-cleaning is in order.
Biden needs to recognize that reality. Thereβs no unity without accountability, and extending a hand to those who would just as soon stab it is the height of foolishness.
Biden also should not ignore those who enabled his successβnot the stereotypical former White Democrat who switched sides in 2016, but , and those progressives who have kept injustice front and center during the previous administration.
Biden may have won the popular vote by 7 million votes, but the winning margins in key states were delivered by a massive get-out-the-vote effort among those groupsβthe same groups targeted by voter suppression and intimidation for decades, and whose votes were the subject of dozens of frivolous lawsuits seeking to overturn the election results.
Their support is not automatic. . They elected Biden not just because of who he was not, but presumably because they want to see βBuild Back Betterβ mean a true rebuilding of the country into one that embraces a reckoning with past sins and creating justice for everyone. Lip service was never enough, but it will be especially insulting now to see a return to the unfair system we hoped weβd left behind.
Amanda Gorman, the first National Youth Poet Laureate and the youngest ever to read at an inauguration, was an inspired choice for Bidenβs inauguration, and her poem, β,β vividly captured the moment we face as a nation:
But while democracy can be periodically delayed,
It can never be permanently defeated.
In this truth, in this faith we trust.
For while we have our eyes on the future,
History has its eyes on us.
It may feel like a new day in America, but it is, to paraphrase , not the end, or even the beginning of the end, but rather the end of the beginning. History indeed will be the judge of how we move forward now.
Chris Winters
is a senior editor at ΄σΟσ΄«Γ½, where he specializes in covering democracy and the economy. Chris has been a journalist for more than 20 years, writing for newspapers and magazines in the Seattle area. Heβs covered everything from city council meetings to natural disasters, local to national news, and won numerous awards for his work. He is based in Seattle, and speaks English and Hungarian.
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