By Rich Lowry
Friday, January 22, 2021
Inaugural addresses are meant to be aspirational, so
President Joe Biden might as well have doubled down on his call for unity in
his address.
After the events of January 6, there’s much to be said
for more unity, or at least less poisonous division, and Biden’s emphasis on
the theme was deeply felt and entirely sincere. But by making it his goal and
the standard by which he’ll be judged, Biden is setting himself up for failure.
When he was walking the final leg of the inaugural parade
route, a couple of CNN journalists shouted, “President Biden, can you unite the
country?”
He didn’t answer, but if he had, honesty should have
compelled him to say, “Actually, probably not.” Just as no one really got tired
of all the winning under President Trump, no one is going to get tired of all
the unifying under President Biden.
There are two problems with calls for unity. One is that
they tend to be nebulous, leaving out what we are all supposed to be unifying
around.
We should all respect and honor one another as Americans,
and seek to preserve our governing institutions, but beyond that, it gets
fuzzy.
The other problem is that calls for unity can carry an expectation of unity, i.e., the belief
that truly reasonable people can’t or shouldn’t disagree in good faith on
matters of profound significance. This is how self-styled unifiers end up
becoming high-handed and divisive (Barack Obama often fell into this trap).
Regardless, there are deep factors in our politics and
society that make unity more difficult to achieve than when Biden came up in
politics.
The media landscape is not as conducive to fostering —
and de facto enforcing — a consensus as it was in the pre-cable, pre-Internet
era of three broadcast networks. Attempts to impose a consensus via decisions
about what content to allow and suppress on today’s social networks and
websites won’t succeed. In fact, as acts of censorship directed overwhelmingly
at conservatives, they will (besides being wrong) fuel a backlash that’s
already well underway.
As issues with a cultural charge have moved to the fore
in recent decades, divisions go deeper and are less prone to compromise or
negotiation. The difference, for instance, between The 1619 Project and Trump’s
1776 Commission (immediately canceled by Biden) involves profound questions
about the nature of our country that can’t be worked out at a meeting of the
House Appropriations Committee.
Finally and relatedly, the parties have become ever more
purely arrayed in ideological, cultural, and geographical opposition to each
other.
Then, there are the more immediate practical issues.
Sometime soon, Trump will become the focus of Washington
again at an impeachment trial that will stoke the fury of his populist
supporters. That’s not a reason to shelve the proceeding, but no one should
pretend that a post-presidency trial attempting to disqualify Trump from
holding federal office will be anything other than a highly contentious drama
blotting out whatever else is happening.
On substance, Biden is not going to pursue a consensus,
bipartisan agenda, but a progressive one. That is his right. But almost
everything he does unilaterally or pushes legislatively will inherently be
anathema to the GOP.
On top of this, with Trump exiting at such a low point,
there will be temptation to ignore any lessons of his rise. That one of Biden’s
first big legislative proposals is yet another “comprehensive” immigration
reform of the sort that has failed repeatedly after mobilizing massive
grassroots opposition on the right shows an impulse to learn nothing.
All that said, President Biden can do his part to lower the temperature of our politics, and raise the tone, simply by not stirring the pot every day the way Trump did and by honoring the norms his predecessor cast aside. This won’t be transformative, but there actually might be some unity around the proposition that it will be a welcome change.
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