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Is Trumpism dead?
Donald Trump appeared large on the national political scene five years ago and soon he will be gone. Or will he? ZOLTAN ZIGEDY warns that a neoliberal 'return to normalcy' under Biden is no answer to right-wing populism

JOSEPH BIDEN will take the Presidential Oath of Office on January 20 and assume the US Presidency. Despite all the media noise about disrupting the election and mounting a coup, there was never any real danger of Trump holding onto the office.

Certainly, anyone who followed Trump’s career would know that his exit will be a circus, likely ending with his leaving the White House to play golf a few days before the inauguration and never returning (there are reputable accounts that he is planning a rally to compete with the inauguration). That’s Trump.

The noise from the media and its enabling punditry was merely a distraction from the President-elect’s awful choices for posts in his administration. Extracting the last bit of Trump-fear, corporate Democrats and their loyal megaphones sought to divert the Party’s left from the shafting they were receiving from Biden’s team.

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