#breaking
#breaking
Donald Trump’s Inaugural Day of Vindication
news.hot166.com
Letter from Trump’s WashingtonThe reëlected President reprised his “American Carnage” address, with repeated jabs at America’s “decline” under Joe Biden, but his central theme, as always, was himself.By Susan B. GlasserJanuary 20, 2025Photograph by Kenny Holston / NYT / ReduxDonald Trump’s most enduring theme is himself—it always was and always will be. He is the Poet Laureate of self-aggrandizement. Hyperbole is how he lives and breathes. Everything he does is the greatest, the strongest, the boldest. On the eve of his return to the White House, the first ex-President in more than a century to reclaim the office, he promised thousands of red-hatted supporters at a rally in Washington “the best first day, the biggest first week, and the most extraordinary first hundred days of any Presidency in American history.” No need to wait for history to render its judgment. Back in November, when he defeated Kamala Harris only four years after being repudiated by the voters, he had declared his comeback win a result of “the greatest political movement of all time,” and promised that his second term in office would become “the golden age of America.”Trump, who first gained fame in the nineteen-eighties for erecting a gilded skyscraper bearing his name in New York, returned to the theme of a golden age on Monday, in an Inaugural Address that, again and again, conflated himself and the country he will once again lead. The speech included a remarkable statement—that the Supreme Being had called this noted sinner back to power. “Over the past eight years, I have been tested and challenged more than any President in our two-hundred-and-fifty-year history,” Trump claimed—a reference, I suppose, to the two assassination attempts he faced during the 2024 campaign and the multiple legal challenges that eventually made him the first convicted felon ever to be elected President. His conclusion? “I was saved by God to make America great again.”Trump never mentioned his predecessor by name, but he could not have been more pointed about January 20th as “Liberation Day” from Joe Biden, a man who, four years ago, promised to return the country to normalcy after Trump’s chaotic and dysfunctional first term, but who instead set the stage for Trump’s return. The country, on Biden’s watch, had suffered “a horrible betrayal,” Trump said, and he began his speech lamenting “America’s decline,” an echo of his famous “American Carnage” address from 2017. His catalogue of the previous Administration’s failings included everything from immigration policy to an education system that, he claimed, teaches kids “to hate our country.” But, as always, Trump’s biggest passion was for the things that touched him personally, nothing more so than what he said was Biden’s “vicious, violent, and unfair weaponization of the Justice Department” against him and his supporters.Trump’s many personal grievances—and his obvious delight in the vindication that his victory represents—are what made this Inauguration so different from any of its predecessors, including his first one, eight years ago. His 2017 Inaugural Address was the shortest recent Inaugural; Monday’s was the longest in recent memory, clocking in at twenty-nine minutes. It was overtly partisan and explicitly self-promotional—the marriage of a campaign rally and a State of the Union, with not much more than a token nod to the aspirational rhetoric that is usually the sum total of such speeches. Past Presidents have used the occasion to speak of the better angels of our nature, to banish fear and summon the best of America. Trump offered “drill, baby, drill,” and a pledge to rename the Gulf of Mexico as the Gulf of America. Previous Inaugurals have been brief, elegiac, inspirational; Trump’s was rambling, incoherent, and blustery. What, in the end, should we think about a speech that essentially threatened war against Panama but never even mentioned the deadly conflict in Europe that he once promised to end in his first twenty-four hours back in power?It was always going to be a day of dissonance. But Trump’s swearing-in at the Capitol Rotunda, driven indoors by frigid weather, offered certain benefits of clarity—illuminating, among other things, who rates in his second Administration and who does not. The image of America’s wealthiest men—Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg—standing in front of Trump’s incoming Cabinet, and right behind Trump’s own children, was a revealing chart of power in the new Washington. The absence of a cheering throng of Trump’s MAGA supporters only reinforced the notion of an emergent and dangerous tech “oligarchy,” as Biden warned about last week, in a farewell address filled with barbs at his successor. More traditional powers, such as America’s governors, were relegated to the overflow room. Take that, Ron DeSantis.But, on Monday, it was Biden as much as Trump who offered a sharp illustration of the day’s contradictory messages. Before breakfast, the outgoing Preside
0 Commentaires ·0 Parts ·301 Vue ·0 Aperçu