Biden champions government's role -- with messages for both parties: ANALYSIS
Of all the sweeping ideas President Joe Biden laid out Wednesday night -- trillions in new spending, vast new investments in health care, education, the environment, infrastructure, police reform and more -- the most grandiose notion he offered may be the concept that national unity is possible, and maybe even close at hand.
Perhaps more notable is how he sees the nation getting closer to his vision of "one people, one nation, one America."
The progress Biden sees coming depends on government -- new spending, new programs and new opportunities powered by dramatic increases in government spending -- even if that means essentially forgoing goals of bipartisanship.
"These are the investments we make together, as one country, and that only the government can make," the president said.
Biden has at times seemed conflicted between the deal-making lawmaker he was over decades in the Senate, and the opportunity he sees for making transformative changes as president. His first address to a joint session of Congress had him edging toward the latter persona over the former.
More from ABC News Political Director Rick Klein's analysis: