Make Your Email Inbox Interesting Again!: Polly Toynbee
Make Your Email Inbox Interesting Again!: Polly Toynbee
Make Your Email Inbox Interesting Again!: Polly Toynbee
Polly Toynbee
Columnist for The Guardian
In addition, Biden is attempting to unify the country with the prospect of good
governance and practical policy solutions which, as the campaign argues,
would ‘build back better’. A Biden administration cannot be a restoration of
the status quo ante: events have moved politics beyond that horizon.
Proposals for expanding healthcare, strengthening labour and environmental
protection and addressing falling education achievement all figure in Biden’s
policy platform.
Challenges are not lacking: the civil service has suffered under Trump’s
chaotic administration and Biden will need Democratic majorities in Congress
to legislate without serious impediment from the Republican party. And Trump
and his campaign are keen to vilify Biden as senile and unfit for office. Yet he has
demonstrated not only a compassionate intelligence but a willingness to listen
and learn—to acknowledge that conventional wisdom may no longer hold and
that the present moment demands creative rethinking of solutions to
America’s problems.
US foreign policy
For international observers, or those who focus on America’s engagement
with the world, nowhere is this creative thinking more urgently needed than in US
foreign policy. This has been disastrous under Trump but it remains generally
defined in relationship to something which ceased to exist 30 years ago.
Pivot to Europe
Following the ‘pivot to Asia’ under Barack Obama—when Biden was his vice-
president—Biden’s foreign policy implies a pivot to Europe. This would not only
restore friends and allies who felt alienated and begin to address the damage
done under the Trump administration. The transatlantic relationship is
essential to the defence of a democratic, pluralist international order and
security.
About Knut Dethlefsen
Knut Dethlefsen serves as the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung representative to the
US and Canada. Previously, he led FES offices in Warsaw, Jerusalem and
Shanghai and was head of its Asia and Pacific Department in Berlin.
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Co-edited by Social Europe Publishing and the Foundation for European Progressive Studies
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