Chas_P, on 2020-December-26, 19:56, said:
The biggest immediate change will be the type of folks appointed in government. Most of Biden's appointees have significant experience in the area they are appointed to (either as a deputy in a previous administration or at the state level); there will be no more big donors with no government experience, media talking heads with no government experience, family members with no government experience, or white nationalists in the administration. We'll also be back to having regular daily briefings and government representatives who communicate (mostly) truthfully and through official channels. It will take some time for the higher degree of competence to have actual impact, but it will be reassuring to have a diplomat in State, a teacher in Education, and an economist in Treasury.
The tone from the White House will also be very different. When tragedies happen (like innocent people shot and killed by police for example), Biden will call the family of the victim and leave them feeling like he cares and will try to make things better. Trump was very much unable to do this! We will also see re-engagement with our traditional allies (like Canada and Europe) and acknowledgement of Russia's electronic attacks on the US (along with possible sanctions or other retaliation). Black Lives Matter rallies in the streets will be fewer and shorter (because the president knows how to tone things down instead of rile people up), the police response will be less violent, and we will slowly see real progress on police reform.
Shortly after Biden takes office, I expect a national plan to deal with Covid. There will be more federal money and support for testing and vaccination, and more uniform policies about opening schools and businesses. This will not immediately "make Covid go away" but people will know when their turn is to be vaccinated, and the federal government will model good behavior (mask wearing, social distancing, vaccinating when eligible) instead of being responsible for multiple super-spreader events. Case numbers should slowly start to decline, and will decline more rapidly in the spring as the vaccine rolls out.
Most importantly, we will be able to go a week without something the president said or did being the top headline in the news. It's hard to have a neutral opinion about Trump since he was basically always the headline (a lot of people absolutely hate him, a smaller number love him). But for Biden, I suspect it will be difficult for people to maintain a strong emotional opinion of him (one way or the other) and this might reduce the partisan fighting at least a little.