Biden offers glimpses of new normalcy: ANALYSIS
There's wanting the presidency, and then there's acting like you want the job.
Biden spent the week fielding calls from world leaders, naming key advisers and imploring Americans to wear masks to protect themselves and the country from COVID-19.
Trump had what was probably the quietest week of his presidency in terms of public appearances. But it was a consequential week nonetheless.
Trump fired his defense secretary and summarily replaced other key officials, with more firings expected. His campaign lawyers sought to upend election results across several states. While the president found time to rage-tweet about Fox News, he did not address the spread of the coronavirus that is threatening the holiday season.
Signs are emerging of Trump defenders losing patience with the tactics and delays. A growing group of Republican lawmakers are insisting that Biden start getting intelligence briefings and are acknowledging publicly that election results are highly unlikely to change.
Biden continues to appear unbothered by the noise. That, in a way, was his appeal from the start -- not to replace Trump with an equal and opposite force, but to provide a different kind of contrast: normalcy, and even sometimes silence.
-ABC News’ Political Director Rick Klein