No, not against Iran, or North Korea, or China. It's the last guy—old whatshisname—who might have done that. Instead, on his first full day in office, Joe Biden declared war on COVID-19. And consistent with that, he signed 11 more executive orders in an effort to combat the pandemic.
The first three pandemic-related XOs, signed on Wednesday, include one that encourages mask-wearing in most of the country and requires it on federal properties, a second that stops the United States' withdrawal from WHO and appoints Anthony Fauci as head of the American delegation, and a third that creates the position of COVID-19 response coordinator. Here's a rundown of the additional XOs added on Thursday:
In contrast to most of the XOs issued on Wednesday, none of these reversed Trump-era XOs, because the Trump administration basically had no pandemic plan. That is the sort of thing that will happen when: (1) an administration is staffed by people of limited capability, and (2) that administration decides that downplaying/ignoring a pandemic is their best move, politically. Neither of these things is true of the Biden administration, and underscoring the point that there is a new team in town, and one with a plan, Thursday's XOs were supplemented with a 200-page strategic plan for curtailing COVID-19.
Of course, the key to returning to normalcy is vaccination. Unfortunately, on that front, the Trump administration has left the Biden administration in the lurch. Thus far, the federal government has acquired 38 million vaccine doses, of which about half have been administered. That leaves an obvious question: Where are the other 19 million doses? The distribution was handled so haphazardly that, at the moment, the Biden administration doesn't know.
This means that the first item of business for the White House will be to locate those missing vaccine doses. Then, they will have to acquire many, many more. Biden promised 100 million vaccinations by the end of his first 100 days, which is plausible, since Pfizer and Moderna have pledged 200 million total doses by the end of March. However, neither 100 million doses nor 200 million is enough to achieve herd immunity. Further, at the moment, people are lining up to get their vaccines. Eventually, the "easy sells" will all be vaccinated, and then it will be on to the much tougher nuts to crack—those who are anti-vaccine, or who don't have access to a vaccination clinic, or who are in denial about COVID-19. So, although they seem to be off to a good start, Biden & Co. certainly have their work cut out for them. (Z)
With the Senate in recess until one day before the inauguration, and with Donald Trump leaving behind a number of well-ensconced loyalists, it will take a while until the Biden administration is fully up and running. That said, progress is being made. Here is a rundown of the major developments of the first 36 hours of the President's term:
Things are going to move quickly, for obvious reasons, such that within a week, most of the Cabinet (if not all of it) will be in place. Then it will be time for Biden to turn his attention to the assistant secretaries, deputy secretaries, and deputy assistant secretaries. (Z)
It is fair to say that Joe Biden really cares about unity, and about reaching across the aisle. That is his nature, it was the way things worked for most of his political career, and it is a big part of what he promised during the campaign and in his inaugural address.
Congressional Republicans, in the past week or so, have also expressed much interest in unity, and in reaching across the aisle. None have been louder than Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), though folks like Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL), Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC), and Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) have also had plenty to say on the subject. Given these men's willingness to support the ultra-divisive Donald Trump, their participation in abuses of Senate norms (ahem, Merrick Garland and Amy Coney Barrett), and their willingness to indulge Trump's claims the election was stolen (or, at least, to stand by and say nothing), one is left with the sense that this recent GOP talk of unity is less than genuine, and just might have something to do with the GOP now being in the minority in both chambers of Congress, and out of the White House.
In case there were any doubts on that point, they were put to rest on Thursday—a.k.a. Biden's first full day in office—when congressional Republicans quickly began pushing back against pretty much everything he wants to do. Most obvious is their resistance to the very first thing on the Biden legislative agenda, namely the COVID-19 relief package. One would think that the GOP would focus on achieving small wins here, and on putting forward an image as reasonable partners in legislating, since if they do not play ball here, the Democrats will just use budget reconciliation to do what they want to do. But instead, the approach was to come out firing, with various Republican senators lambasting Biden's proposal as too expensive, too soon after the previous relief bill, and too inefficient. This is definitely playing with fire; Biden really wants a bipartisan bill, but if he can't have it, then he might as well make a partisan bill into a hyperpartisan bill.
Similarly, McConnell was just hours removed from his pleasant little post-inauguration address on the value of unity when he decided to lambaste several of the executive orders that Biden issued on his first day in office. Focusing in particular on the decision to rejoin the Paris climate accord and to cancel the Keystone XL pipeline, the Minority Leader declared: "On the Biden administration's very first day, it took several big steps in the wrong direction," while also observing that Biden should "remember that he does not owe his election to the far-left." Either McConnell is being disingenuous, or he's so out of touch with the Democratic base that he actually thinks concern about global warming and the environment are far-left positions. Either way, Biden hadn't even been president for 24 hours before McConnell returned to divisiveness.
Of course, that street goes both ways. While Joe Biden is interested in unity, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) has spent too much time on the front lines in the last decade to find that goal plausible. And so, while Schumer is willing to accommodate his GOP colleagues a little bit when it comes to running a 50-50 Senate, he's not willing to go much further than that, and he's also not going to let them forget which party currently holds all the cards. As Schumer and McConnell negotiate a power-sharing agreement, McConnell has pressed for a promise to keep the filibuster intact. Schumer, in no uncertain terms, said "No way, José." That doesn't necessarily mean that the filibuster is dead, but it does mean that the Democrats will keep that option in their back pocket, to potentially be deployed during the Republican obstructionism they assume is coming.
In the past, presidents traditionally got a 100-day honeymoon. Biden's, it would seem, did not even last 100 hours. He'll keep trying to reach across the aisle, at least for now. But our guess is that, as much as he's a nice guy, and as much as he wants to be the anti-Trump, he'll grow weary of having his hand slapped back far more rapidly than Barack Obama did. It is at that point, if and when it comes, that he and Schumer (and Sen. Joe Manchin, D-WV) would start having serious conversations about killing the filibuster. (Z)
At the moment, as far as anyone knows, Donald Trump will still be put on trial in the Senate on the charge of inciting insurrection. However, nobody quite knows when. Nancy Pelosi is holding on to the article of impeachment for now, since the moment she sends it over to the Senate, she (and her regular telephone buddy Chuck Schumer) lose most of their power to control the timing of the proceedings.
Meanwhile, Mitch McConnell is pushing for the trial to start in two weeks, so as to give Trump time to prepare his defense. "Senate Republicans are strongly united behind the principle that the institution of the Senate, the office of the presidency, and former President Trump himself all deserve a full and fair process that respects his rights and the serious factual, legal, and constitutional questions at stake," the Minority Leader said in a statement. It is not clear to us what McConnell's agenda might be, but we doubt he's suddenly discovered an affinity for full and fair processes (given what happened during the first impeachment trial, the Kavanaugh hearings, the Garland non-hearings, etc.) and we also doubt he's truly concerned that the rights of Donald Trump be observed.
Some of McConnell's colleagues, for their part, are trying to avoid a trial altogether. About a dozen GOP Senators, including Lindsey Graham, John Thune (SD), Mike Braun (IN), and Ron Johnson (WI) want the article of impeachment dismissed on the basis that it's not constitutional to try someone after that person has left office. This is a quixotic move that is bound to fail; the weight of legal opinion says it's kosher. That includes the opinion of the Federalist Society, which is not exactly a bastion of pro-liberal or anti-Trump sentiment.
Our best guess, for what it's worth, is that the trial commences on Monday of the week after next (in other words, in 10 days). That is enough to give the Senate time to approve most or all of the Cabinet, and to allow Trump to mount a defense. At the same time, it gets impeachment taken care of while events are still fresh in everyone's minds, and also sends a message to McConnell that he's not calling the shots anymore. (Z)
Maybe not everyone was watching when Joe Biden gave his inaugural address, but lots of people were. Here's a rundown of how some of them felt about it:
As you can see, the response was overwhelmingly positive. We really thought we'd find a few negative reviews, but it would seem that those who are strongly disinclined toward Biden (OAN, Newsmax, etc.) basically just skipped it. (Z)
Due to the pandemic, Joe Biden could not possibly compete with Donald Trump or Barack Obama in terms of in-person attendance at his inauguration. Television, however, is pretty much pandemic-proof, and so levels the playing field. And there, Biden appears to have beaten Trump handily.
The overnight numbers—which may change a little, but probably not much—have Biden attracting 39.87 million viewers, while Trump attracted 38.35 million. That's +1.5 million viewers for Biden or, if you prefer, +4%. Given that Trump has been ratings-obsessed back to his "The Apprentice" days, he is not going to like this. And he doesn't even have Twitter to broadcast claims that this is fake news, or Sean Spicer to tell the press corps that Trump's viewership was larger. Period. (Z)
Yesterday, we noted that the Proud Boys aren't so proud of Donald Trump anymore. Losing an election, then failing to overturn the results, and then slinking out of Washington with your tail between your legs are not signs of "strength," as it turns out. And so, many of them have disembarked from the S.S. Trump.
The QAnon folks have a very similar problem. According to the conspiracy theory, Trump was supposed to use his presidential powers to initiate a "Great Awakening" that would smash, once and for all, the enormous cabal of deep staters, global power brokers, and Satan-worshiping pedophile Democrats. The Donald did not do this before the election, he didn't do it after the election, he didn't manage to overturn the election, and now he's out of office and out of Washington. So much for the Great Awakening. Some QAnon-ers have lost faith in the whole thing, and in Trump. Others are carefully reviewing the story to figure out where the holes are—the Satan-worshiping Democratic pedophiles, perhaps?—so that they might patch them with additional conspiratorial thought.
We've written a number of times that, once a tipping point is reached, Donald Trump's support should collapse pretty quickly. It would appear that his support for the insurrection on Jan. 6 damaged him badly with normal Republicans, and his failure to forestall the inauguration of Joe Biden on Jan. 20 damaged him badly with not-normal Republicans, such that the tipping point may have arrived. If he is convicted by the Senate, Georgia, or New York, he may vanish into the dustbin of history much faster than anyone expected. (Z)