The Daily - ‘Restoring the First Brick of Dignity’: Biden Supporters on His Inauguration
Episode Date: January 20, 2021Joe Biden will be sworn in as the 46th president of the United States today. Among Democrats, there is a sense of joy and hope, but also of caution and concern.We speak with a range of Mr. Biden’s s...upporters, including activists who had originally hoped for a more progressive ticket and longtime fans who embrace his moderation.Guests:Jennifer Medina, a national politics reporter for The New York Times.For an exclusive look at how the biggest stories on our show come together, subscribe to our newsletter. You can read the latest edition here.Background reading: Urging unity, Mr. Biden has tried to focus on his policy plans. But many of those who elected him are still fixated on his predecessor.Mr. Biden’s long career in public office spanned eight presidents. Now, at 78, he will join their ranks.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro. This is The Daily.
For millions of Americans, the past four years have been a national trauma.
Today, as Joe Biden prepares to take the oath of office and become the 46th President of the United States,
some of his supporters are filled with hope,
some with concern, but all with relief. It's Wednesday, January 20th.
There he is. Hey, Brian. Hey, Michael. How's it going? It's been a long year, huh?
Hey, Brian.
Hey, Michael.
How's it going?
It's been a long year, huh?
Has it ever.
Boy, oh boy.
Well, Brian, I'm sure you remember the last time that we talked.
And let me refresh our listeners' memory, because you surely remember it. It was right before Super Tuesday in the middle of the Democratic primary.
And you were a deeply conflicted Democratic voter because you loved Joe Biden.
You had a personal connection with him dating back to your college days when he spoke at an event that you organized.
organized. And what you told us when we spoke to you back then was that you feared Joe Biden was not necessarily the right candidate to beat back Bernie Sanders, who was ascendant at that moment,
and whose views you disagreed with. And you frankly feared that Joe Biden was not necessarily
the right candidate to beat back President Trump. And I want to just remind you what you said back then. You said, so I love Joe. Joe's my guy. But he has not been a strong
candidate. I think he doesn't look good. I think he's not sounding good. And Joe Biden,
who is a great guy, is playing by a rule book that was written in 1980, maybe, 1972.
And that's really concerning to me
because Donald Trump's going to fillet him very quickly.
So just to put this very bluntly,
you were wrong on both fronts
because Biden did beat Bernie Sanders on Super Tuesday. And afterwards,
he beat President Trump by 7 million votes. So is there anything you want to say for yourself?
Sure. This is what my daughter calls the Brian Keene effect.
That in fact, the very next day, Biden just rolled over everybody else and won all those primaries.
It was unbelievable, right? It was Virginia,
it was South Carolina, it was everything. And he was the de facto nominee literally the next day.
And that's the Joe we were looking for. And by the way, the next day I voted for Joe.
And so ultimately the Democrats picked the right candidate to do that.
What do you think was at the core of your wrongness?
Not to put that too weird.
Well, my wrongness was actually more,
not so much a wrongness,
as a struggle that I think a lot of voters were having,
which is, do we go with kind of the dignity
of a guy like Joe Biden or the fight of either a Bernie Sanders or a Michael Bloomberg?
And that was really kind of the challenge.
Which one is going to win?
And actually, I think at the end of the day, what we saw, and I think what this country sees, particularly now,
is really that it's the dignity of a guy like Biden that won people over.
In our original conversation, what you seemed to fear was that Biden, in terms of his energy, his presence, his very nature, might not be up for the task of winning the primary and beating Donald Trump.
task of winning the primary and beating Donald Trump. And if that was your fear back then,
is it your fear that he might not be up to the challenge of this very unique and pretty dark moment now that he has won, which is somehow governing as president successfully at what
feels like a breaking point in the United States.
Yeah, it's good.
That's a good point from before to now.
And to me, he's proven his mettle in the way he's run his campaign.
What do you mean?
And in part, well, because he's been so consistent in not taking the bait.
And he was always kind of above it.
And it was like, oh, this is a guy. He's not going to get down there and play that name-calling game. He's going to keep focused and do the job. And
you can see it already happening. What you would call dignity.
Yes, exactly. And it was like, oh, he's already president.
It sounds like you're saying that Joe Biden will model the unity he wants himself in his conduct as president.
And so I wonder what signs or images or rhetoric you will see from him that makes you think that he's on the right track towards trying to build unity in this moment.
Well, in order to build unity, I think we have to kind of almost break some of the
notions that we assume, which is, what is unity? Because quite frankly, to some folks,
unity sounds like weakness right now. Oh, you know what? We're not going to have unity. How
can I stand there with people who have, quite frankly, stood and watched people
invade the U.S. Capitol. Or incited them. Right.
They have to be punished first.
Like, we can't just be unified with these people.
There has to be a punishment first before we can just be unified.
People need to be held accountable before you can say everything's okay.
And I think that's true whether someone's five years old and they broke a window.
And you can't just say, hey, no, it's okay.
You have to actually show that, no, you actually have to, you know, fix the problem before you can
say, hey, you're never going to do it again. And a coup attempt on the United States of America
from within, I mean, that was, it is unbelievably scary, scarier to me than 9-11. I mean, that day,
I was talking to my children. I'm
like, do you understand these are not, this is not a foreign invader. These are our neighbors.
These are people from just, you know, an hour flight away. I mean, it's like, this is, we've
never ever seen anything like this. And that needs to be fixed so it never happens again.
But there's real opportunity here to, by the way, use that
as an opportunity to bring together the country and say, yeah, you know what? I am Joe Biden,
and I am the president, and this is how this is going to be fixed. And there's your strength.
Well, what if dignity and modeling unity and reaching across the aisle just isn't enough and just does not convince,
and there's very good reason to think it might not convince, tens of millions of Republicans
who have been told Biden's victory is illegitimate to see him as their president
and for there to be any healing. Is that something you fear?
Well, by and large, people are of good nature.
And I think we really need to remember that, that we really are.
Now, when we're called to our worst natures, all of us are prone to actually perk up to our worst nature, and myself included.
So, if we can be called to our best nature, we really were there already.
So that's kind of number one.
And what I really think is fascinating is just social media, Twitter particularly, is a real challenge for free speech, quite frankly.
And we've seen as soon as Trump is now off Twitter, the fake news is, you know, is dropping precipitously. And that is unbelievable
to me that, in fact, the president of the United States has been the one to create this fake news.
And so it's kind of like, okay, well, you know, I can't call fire in a crowded movie theater.
Maybe I shouldn't be able to say a lie to a million people. And that then actually may help the republic survive.
So you're saying just turning off that faucet is a step toward unity?
Huge. I mean, it really is huge. Now, the problem's not fixed. I mean, but it is a huge step. And it's
like, oh, hang on, everybody. We really don't hate each other that much because I just found out that you're not as
terrible a person as I had thought. I just, I'm being fed constant information about how terrible
you are. And if I am not fed that constant information about how terrible you are because
you're not really that terrible, then maybe we can actually have a real conversation. Not that
we all have to get along and hold hands, but maybe you're just not that terrible a person.
Like, we don't have to talk about, oh my God, you know, can you believe what he did? No,
I loved what he did. Oh, he hates these people now. Well, I guess I hate those people then too.
We might as well hate them. Like, it's like, no, we don't have to do that.
So just to summarize, the Brian Keene theory of the case here is turn off the flow of misinformation,
inaugurate a president who represents dignity and a generally lower temperature in American politics,
creates less drama all day, and you start to have a real shot at unity,
Americans seeing themselves as people, not enemies, and the
chance of actually getting big things done. And that's what I think we've done. By putting Biden
in place, we are restoring the first brick of dignity to the United States and to the world.
I remember you telling me that when you were a young man in college and you first met Joe Biden,
he came to speak at your political union, you had dreamed he would run for president.
You'd go on a long political journey with him of skepticism and then affection, but you had that dream when you first met him.
So now that he has done it and he has won, are you scared?
Are you grateful?
Are you nervous?
Are you excited?
I mean, where is your mood knowing the challenges that he's going to face starting at noon on Wednesday?
Well, so, all right.
So, I met him in 89, 1989, and it's now 2021.
So, this is working out just like we planned.
40 years later.
Yep.
Exactly.
31, 30 some odd years later now right this is exactly like we planned
the uh exactly this this is unbelievably to me this is the moment meeting the man i swear to god
like and i you know and he ran in 88 he ran in 2007 this is the moment meeting the man. And I swear, if he had won the other times, it would not be this momentous.
But today, this is a president that this country needs right now after Trump.
You know, we always say politics is a pendulum.
This is that swinging pendulum.
But it is not the pendulum of left and right.
It's the pendulum of personality. And this is the personality that swinging pendulum. But it is not the pendulum of left and right. It's the pendulum of personality.
And this is the personality that we need,
a man who's going to restore dignity
through his own actions, his own faith,
and his own faith in the American people
to actually restore dignity to our country
and actually, quite frankly, to each other.
We're going to be better people to each other.
And we need to be because we are.
Well, Brian, I want to thank you for making time for us again. We really appreciate it.
Anytime. I really thank you for doing, kind of having these discussions. I think it's really
important, Michael. And I really think, I know there's a lot of concern and angst across the
country about just about all of this. But I think we're
a step closer to really unbelievable days ahead for all of us. I wonder, there are so many people who would expect you to feel this deep sense of relief
and excitement. And I'm curious how close, how accurate that is, how close that comes to
your feelings now.
Oh, you know, I'm Jenny Medina, a politics reporter with The Times.
I met Erica Andiola earlier this year.
She's an immigration policy activist in Arizona who famously heckled Biden over the Obama administration's immigration record during a debate in the primaries.
I'm running because so many people...
And yet...
The day that Biden won the election, I know he has been winning it so many times,
but the day that we knew that Biden was going to be the president, I did. I felt, I literally
physically felt a sense of relief that we didn't have to keep on figuring out what was going to be
the next attack coming from the administration. And that felt really great in my body and my mind.
The next day, you know, it was just kind of getting up to like, OK, what's the next what's the next move? What's the next fight? And understanding that for immigrants, for people who tend to be the targets for Republicans. Right. If you hear political ads on TV from a Democrat and a Republican, a Republican is going to be campaigning around immigration. A Democrat is not going to say anything most of the time about immigration.
And so we're not a priority for the most part. And so I think for me, it's not just relief.
I think it's just now I feel a sense of urgency to start pressuring Biden again and start the accountability to make sure that immigration is a priority for him and his administration.
What's your biggest fear?
What are you worried about under the Biden administration?
Is it just being ignored or is it more than that?
Oh, my biggest fear. Well, there's a lot. But I think one of them is that a lot of progressives and Democrats have this this understanding that under's going to be fine. And I just hope
that we can create enough public awareness that people understand that we still have to push and
that I really think that we're going to have a lot more progress and that things are not going
to be like under the Trump administration, but also that things are not going to be perfect, that we're still going to have
detention centers and people who are driving down the street and getting pulled over for a speeding
ticket and getting deported. And the only way that that's going to stop is if we as progressives or
people who care about immigrants are willing to also hold
accountable a democratic president. I really hope that the public is there and those folks who were
rallying against kits and cages that that they're continuing to rally with us. We'll see how things
evolve. We'll be right back.
My name is Kristen Urquiza. I'm 39 years old.
I jumped for joy when I heard of Kamala as the VP pick, and it made me so excited for the entire ticket.
For me, seeing Vice President-elect Harris as the person who an old white man, no offense to Joe Biden, is turning to
as his right-hand person, that to me shatters nearly as many glass and concrete ceilings as
having somebody in that ultimate position. I kept saying, listen to this, Madam Vice President-Elect.
I said it to anybody who would listen, my husband, my kids.
I said, listen, Madam Vice President-Elect, doesn't that have a great ring to it?
So often we as Black women are forced to wear a mask. The mask that we wear in public is a mask that may not allow you to see who we really are.
And I think that we are muffled in many instances because of preconceived notions about Black women.
preconceived notions about Black women. And to see her in that office, I want her to be able to
maybe allow more Black women to feel confident in being able to take off that mask other places than just at home.
Good morning. How are you?
I'm okay. How are you?
I'm hanging in, you know.
I do, I do, I do.
This is Nina Patuk.
We first spoke to Sharonda Bossier back in the summer.
She's a 36-year-old activist who had been organizing as a part of the Black Lives Matter movement for years.
When we spoke, the movement was newly energized
by the ongoing protests and the outpouring of support
following the police killing of George Floyd.
Then, the national conversation shifted to the election and the pandemic.
We wanted to see if the Biden administration felt like a new opportunity for the movement.
You know, I think what's interesting is that many of the activists I have gotten
to know and spend time with definitely were hoping for a more progressive candidate to
end up at the top of the Democratic ticket. And we ended up with Joe Biden. And so
Biden, for many of us, is a compromise. He is a moderate by all accounts and all measures, right?
But we definitely understood that it was critically important that he be elected
to reducing the harm experienced by so many of us, our families and other members of our community.
the harm experienced by so many of us, our families, and other members of our community.
Sharonda and many of her fellow activists also have complicated feelings about Kamala Harris,
namely because of her experience in law enforcement.
A friend of mine made me a customized pair of Tims that say Kamala across the back.
I don't know where, if I will ever wear them, but I own them, right? Because they represent this moment and they represent what she represents to so many of us, complicated or not.
But they also see the potential for greater opportunity with Harris than with Biden.
I would much rather organize to push and sway and educate her.
I think there's real hope that she will move.
I think she has demonstrated an openness to learning. And I also think that she, like many people of color, right, who have
worked in law enforcement, are trying in this particular moment to reconcile with and for
themselves what that means. Yeah. What do you want the administration's first 100 days to look like?
Listen, I have so many thoughts. I will be fully transparent and I will say that I don't think that
Biden gave us much to vote for. I think Trump gave us a lot to vote against. I don't think
I'm saying anything new or original here, right, when I say that we have watched Donald Trump provide legitimacy and political cover for violent extremists.
So often, you know, the media will talk about, well, there was a BLM protest and a counter protest. And you're like, that's not a that not, it's not the same. And I think because so much of the public conversation has been framed as two sides with two different worldviews, the ideas of the far and fringe right have been made legitimate because there is this sense that you can
enact racial violence and that the state has your back. And we have seen it, I think,
you know, especially in the last four years, it's just, it's created for me anyway,
there's just overwhelming sense that people feel empowered to harm me and don't feel like there will be any real consequences
if they do. This belief is why Sharonda worries about the safety of the incoming administration.
It's a worry that's been with her essentially since the moment Biden was elected.
I felt relief and tried very hard to sit with that for a moment. And then I felt almost an immediate sense of dread,
chiefly because I was worried about what the backlash would look like from the right.
And I was worried about the increased scrutiny to which Kamala would be subjected. And I think it's probably a feeling that was most akin to the
feeling I experienced when Obama was elected in 08. This like, man, we just made history.
And also, I'm so afraid for this person. And I feel that for Kamala every time I see her.
Can you talk a little bit about where that fear comes from?
Yeah. I mean, the fear that I'm describing, right, this fear of, you know, you're a history
maker, you're a trailblazer, what are they going to do to you? You know, really comes from the
history of Black people in this country, right? Every time we have
broken a barrier, every time we have tried to stand up for our humanity, every time we have
tried to fully participate in this society, there are examples of very real and violent pushback
from people who have believed that we should stay in our place, so to speak.
And I think even if you listen to, you know, the ways that we talk about, particularly women
who are trailblazers, I think all of the messages we get around that are, if you dare try and be the
first of anything, right, we are going to pick you apart.
And I think that's especially true for Black women and women of color.
What are you most worried about as you look ahead to the Biden administration?
I am really, really nervous that we are going to attempt to appease the people who rioted at the Capitol. And that those of us who have
experienced real harm and real violence, specifically over the past four years, will be
asked in the name of reconciliation to not bring up that harm, right? And to not hold accountable the people who committed that harm
against us. And you've already spoken about some of your hopes for the administration,
but I'm wondering, what are your hopes for yourself?
Honestly, I'm hopeful that I find myself less angry on a regular and consistent basis.
on a regular and consistent basis.
I have over the past four years really, really just harbored this deep sense of anger
and resentment at this country,
at the people who voted for him,
at the people who legitimized him.
And it has gotten to the point
where I listen to the news in the morning and
I'm like shouting back at my phone. And I really would like to not be yelling at,
you know, my speaker in the morning while I'm having my coffee. There's a prayer that I pray, and I call it the nuclear prayer.
And when you pray that prayer, it's a really strong prayer.
You don't pray it unless you're ready for the outcome.
And the nuclear prayer is very simple.
You pray to improve or to remove.
I prayed that prayer before the election.
I prayed it more than once before the election.
I prayed that God improve, but I
also prayed that he removed anyone and any person who did not have man's best interest at heart.
And there's a old spiritual that says he may not come when you want him, but he'll be there right on time. He is God.
And so with that being the case, it didn't happen immediately, but it was there right on time.
I think that America needs a breath of fresh air.
We are tired of being locked up. We are tired of being captive to a tyrant.
We are tired of everything being about me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, and not about us.
U.S., when you put it together, is us.
Simple.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
Late Tuesday night, President Trump granted clemency to his former White House advisor, Steve Bannon, who has been charged with defrauding Trump supporters in a fundraising scheme involving the border wall with Mexico.
Bannon himself lobbied Trump for the pardon, one of many to friends
and allies that are expected in the hours before Trump leaves office. And...
The last time the Senate convened, we had just reclaimed the Capitol from violent criminals
who tried to stop Congress from doing our duty.
criminals who tried to stop Congress from doing our duty.
On his final full day as Senate Majority Leader, Mitch McConnell held President Trump directly responsible for the attack on the Capitol during a speech from the Senate floor.
The mob was fed lies.
They were provoked by the president and other powerful people.
They were provoked by the president and other powerful people.
The remarks reinforced the view that McConnell is open to convicting Trump of inciting violence when the impeachment process moves from the House to the Senate.
McConnell ended his speech by vowing a peaceful transfer of power later this morning.
We'll have a safe and successful
inaugural right here on the west front of the Capitol, the space that President
Bush 41 called democracy's front porch. The inauguration of President-elect
Biden and Vice President-elect Harris is scheduled to begin at 11.30 a.m. Eastern.
Today's episode was produced by Nina Patuk, Alexander Lee Young, Sydney Harper, Austin Mitchell, Leslie Davis, Rochelle Bonja, Eric Krupke, and Jessica Chung.
It was edited by M.J. Davis-Lynn, Paige Cowan, and Lisa Tobin, and engineered by Chris Wood.
That's it for The Daily. I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you tomorrow.