At this point four years ago, Donald Trump and his team had already picked an international fight with his Muslim ban. And introduced Americans to the idea of “alternative facts.” And fired Michael Flynn. And reviewed sensitive intelligence related to North Korea in front of Mar-a-Lago guests. And lashed out publicly at a prominent department-store chain after it stopped carrying branded merchandise from one of the then-president’s adult daughters.
It was unlike any start of any modern American presidency. It was also utterly bewildering.
Nearly four years later, shortly before Election Day 2020, the Republican told voters that his opponent would be “boring,” adding that Americans who want “boredom” should “vote for Sleepy Joe Biden.”
As it turns out, this didn’t persuade much of the electorate, and Biden won by about 7 million votes. But the criticism from his predecessor lingers for a reason: plenty of political observers are marveling at the new president’s capacity for being humdrum. New York, for example, recently noted that Biden’s term is off to a “kind of boring” start. A Washington Post analysis added yesterday:
Hours after his GOP predecessor issued a rambling, grievance and falsehood-fueled statement attacking the top Republican in Congress, sparking a frenetic flurry of tweets from some political reporters, President Biden gave the country a boring town hall performance on CNN.
It’s worth emphasizing that the Post’s use of the adjective was tongue in cheek. The report went on to note that Biden’s event was only “boring” to those who aren’t interested in the U.S. response to the pandemic, “tedious” to those unconcerned with vaccination distributions, “dull” to those indifferent to a possible minimum-wage increase, and so on.









