Newsweek International

CAN BIDEN SUCCEED WHERE OBAMA FAILED?

TWELVE YEARS AFTER JOE BIDEN was sworn in as the vice president of hope and change, hope is in short supply and the need for change is even more acute. Progressives have a rare opportunity to enact their agenda—but they will need to play the kind of hardball they have backed away from in the past, because Biden continues to send conflicting messages. For every promise of transformational change, he signals a desire to appease a Republican Party intent on destroying his presidency.

The stakes could not be higher: One out of every thousand Americans has died from a lethal pandemic, with no end yet in sight. The economy is officially still humming along, but millions face eviction, bankruptcy and hunger. Even our democracy is under unprecedented siege by an insurrectionist movement encouraged by the outgoing president and his loyal minions in Congress.

The path forward is difficult to envision amid the fog of culture war, political war and the threat of actual, real-life civil war. But it is clear that Biden is at a crossroad and still unsure which way to go.He can follow his boss, Barack Obama, who pursued bipartisanship, comity and compromise—accommodating corporate power.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Newsweek International

Newsweek International2 min read
Hannah Einbinder
AFTER A NEARLY TWO-YEAR HIATUS, THE Max-original Emmy Award-winning series Hacks is back. And Hannah Einbinder, who plays Ava, the comedy writer to legendary—and difficult—stand-up comic Deborah Vance (Jean Smart), used the time off to figure out how
Newsweek International1 min read
Dawn to Dust
A couple look out over the Greek capital from Tourkovounia Hill as the city lies cloaked in Saharan dust on April 23. The National Observatory of Athens said winds blew “Minerva Red”—seen from a NASA satellite—over the Eastern Mediterranean region, b
Newsweek International2 min read
Eugenio Derbez
FOR EUGENIO DERBEZ, MAKING THE TRANSITION FROM BEING ONE OF Mexico’s most recognizable faces in comedy to the American market was not easy. “We don’t laugh at the same things. Humor in Mexico and in the U.S. is completely different. I had to reinvent

Related Books & Audiobooks