The election year was bruising for America. What does 2025 hold?
SACRAMENTOΒ βΒ How do you summarize β or make sense of β 2024? Itβs been a year of upheaval, division, winners and losers. And perhaps most disturbingly, a year that has exposed fault lines in American democracy that at times seem too wide to cross.
Our columnists Anita Chabria and Mark Z. Barabak continue a tradition of closing out December with a little perspective and a dash of crystal-balling for what lies ahead. As we enter 2025, hereβs how theyβre leaving behind the old and ushering in the new.
Chabria: The word I am hearing most as we head into the New Year is exhaustion. Many of us canβt even remember the big events of 2024 outside of a presidential campaign like no other. But weβve had them: In March, the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore collapsed. The wars in Gaza and Ukraine continued, and a Syrian dictator recently unexpectedly toppled. Taylor Swift finally stopped touring, and Sean βDiddyβ Combs was arrested on sex trafficking charges. We even had a summer Olympics in Paris, which seems about 300 years ago.
But all of that was eclipsed by a presidential election that has left half of America cheering and half of America reeling; at the end of the day, the popular vote was nearly evenly split, with neither candidate reaching 50%. So much for a mandate.
If exhaustion is the word to close out 2024, Iβm nominating βcommitmentβ as the word for 2025. How committed are Republicans to implementing Trumpβs campaign promises to fundamentally remake America by kicking out immigrants and implementing conservative social policies such as further restricting abortion access? And how committed and capable are Democrats of regrouping and opposing those plans?
What do you think? How are you feeling as the year ends?
Barabak: Iβm feeling both hunky and dory, but thatβs because I donβt let things beyond my control β earthquakes, asteroids, crushingly disappointing election results β get me down. But this isnβt a self-help column, or a prescription for better (or impervious) living. So Iβll stick to our brief, which is assessing the year past and looking ahead.
If I were to choose a word for 2025, I suppose Iβd go with βcurious.β As in curious to see what 2025 brings with a president hellbent on disruption (war with Panama, anyone?), operating with, as you suggest, the most tenuous-to-nonexistent of mandates.
In my view, Trump was elected mainly to tame inflation β bringing down the oft-discussed price of eggs and bacon, for starters β and securing the countryβs southern border with Mexico. We could search high and low and weβd probably find precisely zero people in America who voted for Trump because they wanted the U.S. to take control of Greenland.
I wonβt deny thereβs a deep-seated unhappiness with government and politicians, a widespread feeling the status quo isnβt working and an eagerness to see Washington β and Sacramento, for that matter β shaken up. But randomized, unceasing chaos? Weβll see how that goes down. If you think the 2024 campaign was wild β a switcheroo of Democratic nominees, two attempts on Trumpβs life, too many weird campaign-trail moments (Hannibal Lecter! Arnold Palmerβs penis!) to possibly list here β well, buckle up.
Chabria: True words, Mark. We are in for a ride. As you and I have spoken about in the past, whatβs best for America and democracy is giving our incoming president both respect and a chance. But I also think itβs critical that we remember that Trump has a history of lying and lawbreaking, as evidenced by both his criminal convictions and his loss in a sexual-abuse civil lawsuit to E. Jean Carroll.
His actions show us that he is not a man to be trusted. But we are in the strange days of rewriting recent history to soften the unpleasant parts, while also gearing up to repeat them.
For example, Trumpβs once-and-future βborder czar,β Thomas Homan, said he plans on not just bringing back policies that separate families, but giving American-born children (and therefore citizens) of undocumented immigrants the painful option of being separated from parents or being deported with them.
Some Trump supporters have said they like his brash talk, but believe itβs no more than posturing. This coming year will be revelatory on that front. Whether you trust Trump now or not, weβre about to find out if heβs all talk.
But itβs not just Trump. Weβve seen those around him, most notably Elon Musk, grab power and move swiftly to cram their self-serving agendas down our throat.
Barabak: A candidate elected as the populist tribune of the aggrieved working class surrounds himself with a team of billionaires and names foxes to guard government henhouses and dismantle programs serving many of those very same hard-pressed voters.
But I donβt want to be too much of a churl.
For years, the legendary Washington Post political cartoonist Herbert Block, aka Herblock, drew Richard Nixon with a menacing five oβclock shadow. After Nixon was elected president in 1968, Herblock drew a freshly shorn Nixon, on the theory that every new president deserves βa clean shave.β (Iβm not that old, folks. I just read a lot of history. And assorted political trivia.)
So there is something sporting and noble about a fresh start and leaving bygones in the past, as you suggest.
That said, we agree thereβs a danger in too much memory-holing β especially if youβre expecting an emboldened 78-year-old twice-impeached, feloniously convicted leopard to suddenly change spots. Letβs hope for the best, but not be delusional or too quick with the whitewash. We saw how Nixonβs presidency turned out.
On a more cheerful note, you were quite taken with BeyoncΓ©βs NFL halftime performance at the Ravens-Texans Christmas showdown.
Chabria: As were we all! BeyoncΓ© is queen of her craft, and reminded us all what fun looks and sounds like. We can all use a dose of that right now.
But BeyoncΓ© is also a reminder about the importance of knowing yourself and standing your ground. Of all the many forgotten history lessons of recent years, hers is one of the few with a happy ending. In 2016, after she appeared on the Country Music Assn. Awards, there was backlash to her supposedly wading outside her genre and into the boot-stomping, flag-waving β very white β world of country.
Flash forward to her recent NFL appearance and the release of her country album, βAct II: Cowboy Carter,β and itβs quite clear, she persisted.
Sometimes, resisting is simply persisting, one day at a time.
So with that in mind, and with journalism under attack, Iβll end this year with a thank you. To all the readers who have stuck with Mark and me through this election, I appreciate your willingness to hear our perspectives. I wonβt speak for Mark, but for myself, I generally donβt care about Republican or Democrat, but I do care about writing with compassion and truth.
So whatever comes next, my New Yearβs resolution is to persist in staying true to those core principals. Any final thoughts from you, Mark?
Barabak: Just a question: Will you think less of me as a colleague and human being if I confess I hadnβt the slightest clue about BeyoncΓ©βs halftime performance until you mentioned it? I guess I was too deeply burrowed in my history books, absorbing political trivia.
But, like you, I want to thank our readers for sticking with us and echo that sentiment as regards compassion and truth. I also hope we managed to inform and occasionally entertain you along the way. And a special thanks to the paid subscribers among you, for helping keep the lights on.
Weβd both like to wish each and every one of you β Democrat, Republican, libertarian, vegetarian β a happy, healthy and prosperous New Year.
Weβll see you in 2025.