WASHINGTON — Joe Biden promised nothing short of a national exorcism when he took office. He wanted to ''restore the soul" of the country and prove that Donald Trump was only a footnote in the American story, not its next chapter.
The pitch was ''let's try to get things back to normal as best we can,'' said Sean Wilentz, a historian who met twice with Biden in the White House.
It didn't work out that way. Despite exceeding expectations when it came to cutting bipartisan deals and rallying foreign allies, Biden was unable to turn the page on Trump. Four years after voters chose Biden over Trump, they picked Trump to replace Biden. It's an immutable and crushing outcome for an aging politician in the last act of his long career, one that will likely become the prism for how Biden is viewed through history.
''The fact is, the abnormality did not end,'' said Wilentz, a professor at Princeton University. ''He may not have appreciated what he was up against.''
Trump's impending return underscores the limits of Biden's ability to reshape the country's trajectory as his celebrated predecessors were able to do. With the end of his single term only days away, Biden acknowledged in his farewell address on Wednesday night that his central promise remains unfulfilled. America exists in a state of ''constant struggle, a short distance between peril and possibility,'' he said.
Biden also said that ''our democracy has held strong, and every day I've kept my commitment to be president for all Americans for one of the toughest periods in our nation's history.''
The country hasn't waited for his assessment. Only a quarter of Americans said Biden, a Democrat, was a good or great president, according to the latest poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. That's lower than the views of the twice-impeached Trump, a Republican, when he left office soon after the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol and during the deadly depths of the coronavirus pandemic.
Biden's friends and supporters insist that views will shift over time.