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US Election 2020: Biden calls for unity, reconciliation

Agency Report with Okay.ng
By Agency Report with Okay.ng
Published: November 8, 2020
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President-elect Joe Biden has called for unity and promised “a new day for America” in his first national address since he won the tense US election and ended the era of Donald Trump.

After jogging onto the outdoor stage to the music of Bruce Springsteen in his hometown of Wilmington, Delaware, Biden delivered a message of hope and healing to a crowd of cheering supporters and tens of millions more on television.

The Democrat’s victory speech followed an election conducted in the midst of a raging coronavirus pandemic. But instead of sounding triumphant, Biden’s accent was more on changing hearts in a country split down the middle between Democrats and Republicans.

US President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris stand with spouses Jill Biden and Doug Emhoff after delivering remarks in Wilmington, Delaware, on November 7, 2020, after being declared the winners of the presidential election. Jim WATSON / AFP
US President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris stand with spouses Jill Biden and Doug Emhoff after delivering remarks in Wilmington, Delaware, on November 7, 2020, after being declared the winners of the presidential election.
Jim WATSON / AFP

Promising “not to divide but unify,” Biden reached out directly to Trump supporters, declaring “they’re not our enemies, they’re Americans.”

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“Let’s give each other a chance,” he said, urging the country to “lower the temperature.”

“Let this grim era of demonization in America begin to end, here and now.”

Casting his eye further, Biden said he would “make America respected around the world again” — a reference to Trump’s tearing up of traditional diplomatic ties.

“Tonight, the whole world is watching America and I believe that at our best America is a beacon for the globe,” he said.

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Addressing the coronavirus, which has killed more than 237,000 Americans under Trump’s erratic leadership, Biden said he would form a task force of “leading scientists” this Monday.

Fireworks

While attendance was limited for social distancing purposes to about 360 cars at the drive-in style event, crowds numbering thousands of people, many of them dancing and waving American flags, lined the highway leading to the facility.

This was Biden’s first public appearance since US television networks declared earlier Saturday that he’d taken an insurmountable lead in the nearly complete count from Tuesday’s election, giving him victory against Trump, who will now become a rare one-term president.

The celebratory event, which featured confetti, fireworks, and a soundtrack including Springsteen and Tina Turner, also gave Americans a closer look at Biden’s running mate Kamala Harris, who will make history as the country’s first female and first Black vice president.

In her speech, cheered every few seconds by the ecstatic crowd, Harris lauded the record turnout and said that after so much division, “Joe is a healer.”

“When our very democracy was on the ballot in this election, with the very soul of America at stake, and the world watching, you ushered in a new day for America,” she said.

Biden, who turns 78 later this month, will be the oldest person to become president when he takes office on January 20.

No Trump concession

Crowds took to the streets in major cities across the US in celebration of Trump’s defeat, while key Western allies such as Germany, which had a tempestuous relationship with the Republican, quickly congratulated Biden.

But Trump — becoming the first one-term president since George H. W. Bush — refused to concede and continued to claim he was a victim of fraud.

Biden was “rushing to falsely pose” as the winner, Trump said in a statement as he arrived to play golf at a course he owns in Virginia, his first trip outside the White House since Election Day.

There is no evidence to support Trump’s unprecedented claims of mass fraud.

Tuesday’s polling went off without any reported serious incidents or even technical glitches, despite the shadow of a still out-of-control Covid-19 pandemic and volcanic political tensions.

With vote-counting nearly complete around the huge country, Biden built up an irreversible lead.

New tallies from the state of Pennsylvania early Saturday put him over the top, ending four days of tense waiting and allowing the TV networks’ specialized data analysts to call the overall result, as they do every election.

Spontaneous celebrations

In Philadelphia, Los Angeles, Washington, and other majority-Democratic cities, people poured into the streets to celebrate, and car horns honked.

An excited crowd of several thousand gathered on Black Lives Matter Plaza next to the White House, giving a hostile reception to Trump as his motorcade passed nearby on return from the golf course.

People dance in street after listening to President-elect Joe Biden address the nation after being declared the winner of the 2020 presidential election on November 07, 2020, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
People dance in street after listening to President-elect Joe Biden address the nation after being declared the winner of the 2020 presidential election on November 07, 2020, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

“It’s been so many years waiting for this day to happen,” said Jack Nugent, a 24-year-old software engineer.

There were similar scenes in New York, Trump’s birthplace.

However, in Arizona, where the race was close, a group of almost 1,000 Trump supporters gathered in Phoenix to protest what they said was a stolen election.

“There’s a lot of fraud here. It needs to be either redone totally or recounted,” Donna McCollum, 77, said.

Western allies send congrats

For Biden, who got more than 74 million votes, a record, the triumph was the crowning achievement of his half-century in US politics — including eight years as deputy to Obama, the first Black US president who hailed the “historic and decisive” win.

Biden has vowed to get the coronavirus pandemic under control. He has also promised to restore traditional US diplomacy after Trump’s dramatic pivot to unilateral nationalism.

The leaders of Britain, Germany, France, and other European countries were the first, along with Canada, to send congratulations.

Japan’s Prime Minister, Yoshihide Suga sent “warm congratulations,” while India’s Premier Narendra Modi also tweeted on Biden’s “spectacular victory.”

The head of the NATO military alliance, which reeled from Trump’s disruptive approach after decades of US leadership, also quickly welcomed Biden’s win.

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said Biden’s victory was a chance for the US to “compensate for its previous mistakes and return to the path of adherence to international commitments”.

Israel’s leader Benjamin Netanyahu — a close Trump ally — congratulated Biden, calling the president-elect “a great friend of Israel”.

There was no immediate reaction from other major nations, including China, Russia, and Saudi Arabia.

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