I expected relief, but Saturday turned out to be a day of joy.
When in late morning Eastern time, the networks and AP finally called Pennsylvania (throwing in Nevada shortly afterwards) and therefore affirming the presidency for Joe Biden, cheers rippled through the nation and spontaneous demonstrations began.
Someone said she was approaching the Saturday farmer’s market when she heard cheers erupt ahead of her, and she knew exactly what they had to mean. And pretty soon there was dancing in the streets of Philadelphia.
Black Lives Matter Plaza in Washington, which had been the scene of police violence and angry demonstrations, became a happy party, all the way down to the gates of the White House.
And it happened all around the country, in cities and suburbs and towns. The cheering from individual buildings could be heard wafting into the air in New York City. (This Guardian video captured some of these moments.)
“I had to explain to my kids just now that this is not the normal level of celebration after an election in America,” tweeted Preet Bharara. “It feels like Joe Biden also won the World Cup.”
The joy extended beyond the shores. “In countries across the globe, people reported fireworks, cheering and the sound of church bells ringing after President-elect Joe Biden was named the winner of the 2020 presidential election,” wrote The Hill.
There were also tears—of joy and something more. Here for example are the eloquent tears of Van Jones on CNN.
The joy came from the people who made it happen. “Robert Mueller didn’t save us,” tweeted Jennifer Taub. “Impeachment didn’t save us. We saved ourselves. We voted. The people have spoken. Donald, you’re fired.”
" I am listening to honking horns, clattering pots, cheers, and joyful shouts," wrote journalist Eric Levitz. “My neighborhood – circumscribed along race and/or class lines in normal times, atomized into a collection of masked individuals in the COVD era – is sharing a collective experience of joy. Beneath the mutual suspicions, poisonous power imbalances, bigotries and species of self-absorption that color social life in this place, there is a low hum of shared values and solidarity, and today, Trump’s defeat made it loud enough to hear.”
" From the moment CNN made the official call onward, we finally got the catharsis that had been so sorely lacking on Tuesday night, and I think it felt just as good as it would have on November 3," concluded New York Magazine associate editor Benjamin Hart. “The celebrations in the streets of Brooklyn, where I live, and in cities across the country were reminders that unalloyed political joy is still possible.”
Later in the evening darkness of Wilmington, celebration met drama when the Vice-President Elect strode onto the stage, in a symbolic white suit—the color of the Sufragettes. From that moment Kamala Harris and then President-Elect Joe Biden grew into their roles before our eyes, with confidence and clarity.
“And 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,” Kamala Harris said.” And you delivered a clear message. You chose hope and unity, decency, science, and yes, truth!”
As the first woman and first woman of color to be elected Vice-President, she spoke to the girls watching, too young to remember President Obama. “Because every little girl watching tonight sees that this is a country of possibilities and to the children of our country regardless of your gender, our country has sent you a clear message: dream with ambition, lead with conviction and see yourselves in a way that others may not simply because they've never seen it before.”
Of her own role she pledged: “I will strive to be a vice president like Joe was to President Obama, loyal, honest, and prepared, waking up every day thinking of you and your family, because now is when the real work begins, the hard work, the necessary work, the good work, the essential work...”
Then Joe Biden bounded onto the stage, jogging to the podium, and gave the most energetic, concentrated, powerful speech I’ve seen him make since the 2008 or 2012 Democratic Convention. Even with a few specific echoes of President Obama, it was all Biden.
He remarked on this day of joy. “And what I must admit has surprised me, tonight we're seeing all over this nation, all cities in all parts of the country, indeed across the world, an outpouring of joy, of hope of renewed faith in tomorrow, bring a better day. And I'm humbled by the trust and confidence you've placed in me.”
" The Bible tells us, “to everything there is a season: a time to build, a time to reap, and a time to sow and a time to heal.” This is the time to heal in America. “ A time to heal became the universal headline.
Then Biden forecast his priorities. "Now this campaign is over, what is the will of the people? What is our mandate? I believe it's this: Americans have called upon us to marshal the forces of decency, the forces of fairness, to marshal the forces of science and the forces of hope in the great battles of our time. The battle to control the virus. The battle to build prosperity. The battle to secure your family's health care. The battle to achieve racial justice and root out systemic racism in this country. And the battle to save our planet by getting climate under control. The battle to restore decency, defend democracy, and give everybody in this country a fair shot. “
And then, the fireworks over the parking lot.
“Protecting our democracy takes struggle,” Kamala Harris had concluded. “It takes sacrifice. But there is joy in it.”
There was on Saturday.
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