Even with the turnover of the Senate to Democratic control, there has been a fear that Donald Trump's trashing of governmental norms was so profound that it would take years for the nation to emerge from the nightmare.
President Joe Biden has an answer for that: Not to worry.
In the very first executive orders of his presidency, Biden has signaled that he intends to do more than merely repeal and reverse Trump's policies. His plan is to eradicate any trace of Trumpism from American government.
Implicit in Biden's first orders is the notion that his effort will be easier than it seems on the surface. For one thing, it will have been aided by Trump, whose slipshod approach to governing produced a roll of regulations that were born legally impaired.
As we've reported, scores, if not hundreds, of Trump environmental and health care rules, have been blocked by federal judges for violating the Administrative Procedure Act, which requires rule-making to be based on solid technical foundations and subjected to public comment. (The usual judicial boilerplate for kicking the rules out was that they were "arbitrary and capricious.")
That's true of Biden efforts to undo some Trump policies. But Biden isn't likely to make the same mistake Trump's vandals made, because Biden's team is composed of adult professionals who know how to do government.
In contrast to the hand-wringing in progressive circles that the Trump years represented an end to the New Deal concept of government as serving all the people — that perhaps the New Deal was an anomaly in the continuum of government's increasing service to the privileged class — Biden's opening sallies suggest that the Trump administration was the anomaly.
Biden's policies and practices would reinstate the norms established by Franklin Roosevelt in the 1930s and observed even by Republican administrations (more or less) ever since.