Joe Biden’s approach is likely to include listening and cooperation. Politicians – and citizens – should emulate it

After Dwight Eisenhower had been sworn in as United States president on Capitol Hill in January 1953, he recited a prayer to the watching crowd that he had written himself that same morning. The words embodied how Eisenhower hoped to govern. “Especially we pray,” he told them, “that our concern shall be for all the people regardless of station, race or calling. May cooperation be permitted and be the mutual aim of those who … hold to differing political beliefs.”

To a 2020s audience those words may now seem anodyne and pious, the usual politician’s guff that we barely listen to. Race, in particular, would remain an unhealed wound through Eisenhower’s eight years in the White House. Nevertheless, the prayer truthfully embodies an approach to politics that actually worked for much of 1950s America.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

‘They don’t represent us’: Rochdale voters on why they deserted major parties

Voters express dissatisfaction with the Labour party and other groups as insurgent…

News Corp agrees deal with Google over payments for journalism

News Corp will receive ‘significant payments’ to feature news outlets in Google’s…

Russo double helps Manchester United beat Everton in WSL at Old Trafford

Goals from lifelong fans Alessia Russo and Katie Zelem helped Manchester United…

Sweden to increase airport fees for high-polluting planes

Climate impact, such as use of biofuels, to be taken into account…