December 24, 2024

Biden’s State of the Union speech will channel historian Jon Meacham’s faith in the United States

State of the Union #StateoftheUnion

Historian Jon Meacham speaks during a discussion with Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden and historian Doris Kearns Goodwin on the first anniversary of the deadly insurrection at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Thursday, Jan. 6, 2022. (Al Drago/The New York Times/Bloomberg via Getty Images) © Provided by Yahoo News Historian Jon Meacham speaks during a discussion with Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden and historian Doris Kearns Goodwin on the first anniversary of the deadly insurrection at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Thursday, Jan. 6, 2022. (Al Drago/The New York Times/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

When he was Vice President of the United States, Joe Biden would sometimes call Jon Meacham, then the editor of Newsweek, for his insight on big-picture ideas.

Having served as a Senator for more than 30 years, Biden was, at the time, as close as most political observers thought he would ever come to the presidency itself. In the calls between the two men, Biden relied on Meacham as a sturdy sounding board on national affairs, remembers Daniel Klaidman, then Meacham’s top deputy and today the editor of Yahoo News.

“Jon’s cell phone would ring and I’d hear him say, “hello Mr. Vice President,” before closing the door to his office,” Klaidman recalls. “JFK used to call Ted Sorenson his ‘intellectual blood bank. It appears to be a similar thing between Biden and Meacham.”

The relationship between Meacham and Biden has only deepened since then. During the first two years of the Biden presidency, Meacham has served as something of an in-house intellectual and a speechwriter called upon at high-stakes moments—like tonight’s State of the Union address.

The US Capitol in Washington, DC, on February 6, 2023, ahead of US President Joe Bidens State of the Union address on February 7. (Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images) © Provided by Yahoo News The US Capitol in Washington, DC, on February 6, 2023, ahead of US President Joe Bidens State of the Union address on February 7. (Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images)

Meacham was recently at the presidential retreat at Camp David, where he was one of several top advisers who helped craft the president’s State of the Union speech, which is expected to celebrate the nation’s economic recovery from the coronavirus pandemic while serving as the preamble to Biden’s expected announcement that he will seek re-election.

A son of the South who still lives in his native Tennessee — Meecham teaches at Vanderbilt, in Nashville — he is the author of a celebrated Andrew Jackson biography published just days after the Obama-Biden ticket triumphed in the 2008 presidential election.

He is also something of a politician, with influence most academics and journalists could only dream of. At the behest of the Biden campaign, he spoke at the 2020 Democratic National Convention. “The historic seriousness of what the country is facing is a huge piece of what we have talked about in the campaign. We felt it was important to have a historian like Jon Meacham to put all of this perspective. This is a moment of crisis in our country’s history,” a campaign spokesman explained to The New York Times.

Biden continued to rely on Meacham after defeating Trump. “I do occasionally advise the president-elect on historical matters and some major speeches,” Meacham told the Financial Times in December 2020. 

U.S. President Joe Biden carries a book on Lincoln by Jon Meacham as he boards Air Force One while departing from Joint Base Andrews in Maryland, U.S., November 1, 2022. (Kevin Lamarque/Reuters) © Provided by Yahoo News U.S. President Joe Biden carries a book on Lincoln by Jon Meacham as he boards Air Force One while departing from Joint Base Andrews in Maryland, U.S., November 1, 2022. (Kevin Lamarque/Reuters)

To those who know him, the 53-year-old historian’s orotund voice can almost be discerned in Biden’s frequent invocations of a unique national destiny, a trope more indebted to conservative hero Ronald Reagan than to contemporary Democrats. That is unlikely an accident: On the 30th anniversary of Reagan’s 1989 departure from the White House, Meacham praised him in New York Times for persistent faith “in the possibilities of a country that was forever reinventing itself,” contrasting his optimism with Trump’s dark nostalgia.

It was Meacham who penned Biden’s inaugural address, in which the new president — standing on the same ground where, two weeks before, violent pro-Trump rioters had stormed the Capitol — pledged “to restore the soul and to secure the future of America.”

That was also the central theme of Meacham’s bestselling “The Soul of America,” published in the midst of the Trump presidency. In that book, Meacham wished for a president with “a temperamental disposition to speak to the country’s hopes rather than to its fears.”

Biden clearly envisions himself in similar terms. Meacham crafted the president’s speech on democracy, delivered from Philadelphia in early September, with the congressional midterms only weeks away. In those remarks, Biden charged that “Donald Trump and the MAGA Republicans” — his preferred term for the former president’s political movement — “represent an extremism that threatens the very foundations of our republic.”

Former U.S. President Donald Trump speaks at a rally for Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) at the Miami-Dade Country Fair and Exposition on November 6, 2022 in Miami, Florida. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images) © Provided by Yahoo News Former U.S. President Donald Trump speaks at a rally for Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) at the Miami-Dade Country Fair and Exposition on November 6, 2022 in Miami, Florida. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

Some observers believe that Biden’s decision to cast the midterms as a referendum on democracy itself helped prevent Republicans from taking control of the Senate or making bigger gains in the House.

Tuesday night’s address is likely to be a culmination of themes Meacham and Biden have been discussing for years. Some of those themes appear in Meacham’s new book, “And There Was Light,” about Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War.

Meacham notes that Lincoln “governed a nation in which a violent and vociferous element was captive to its own vision,” a reference to the secessionist South that seems to just as readily apply to today’s political extremists, inculcated in Internet conspiracy theories and deeply out of touch with reality.

Then, as now, extremes pulled the nation apart, making irrevocable disunion the certain fate of the short-lived experiment called the United States.

Or so it must have seemed to many during the darkest days of the Civil War. The president, Meacham writes, must always keep believing otherwise. “It is a fact of American history that we are not always good, but that that goodness is possible,” Meacham writes. “Not universal, not ubiquitous, not inevitable — but possible.”

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