You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load.
In his second Inaugural Address, the president reprised dark themes from his first and laid out an expansive policy agenda.
If his first Inaugural Address was a relentlessly dark vision of “American carnage,” President Trump made his second one a paean to the power of one person’s ability to rescue a nation — specifically his.
The 47th president’s 29-minute address on Monday, just after noon, painted an even bleaker portrait of a country in disarray, one seized by “years of a radical and corrupt establishment,” with the pillars of society “broken and seemingly in complete disrepair.” America, he said, “cannot manage even a simple crisis at home, while at the same time stumbling into a continuing catalog of catastrophic events abroad.”
It was a misleading and incomplete assessment of a country that has a growing economy, with falling inflation, slowing illegal immigration, a record-breaking stock market, the lowest levels of violent crime in years and a military that has limited engagement in conflicts around the world.
In that way, it was a speech that went to the core of Mr. Trump’s political appeal: convincing his supporters that he — and he alone — can fix what ails (or does not ail) the country. And it represented a reprisal of how he framed his first presidency — as a constant fight against enemies, foreign and domestic.