US President Joe Biden has repeatedly called for unity in the United States during the election, but there is still a split in American politics. Joe Biden, who has called for an end to the war in political debates, however, seems to be far from expected, even for him. According to Al Jazeera, about eleven weeks have passed since US President Joe Biden delivered a speech at his inauguration; Where he spoke of unity and called on Americans and politicians to reduce political tensions.

“There is no need for fire in politics,” Biden said in a speech on January 20, because it destroys everything in its path. “In any dispute, we do not need to turn it into a full-blown war, and we must abandon the culture in which facts are manipulated and even fabricated.”

Now the question is: what is the current situation? Answer: It does not seem so good.

The war continues

The events of the last months of Trump’s presidency, which were marred by allegations of fraud and even the January 6 Capitol Hill riots, continue to influence second-rate politicians in both parties, undermining Biden’s call for unity. Some Democrats, including Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the Democrats’ leading representative in the House of Representatives, have blamed Republicans for the siege of the Capitol, to the extent that they accuse Republican Sen. Ted Cruz of killing and supporting the perpetrator. The main one reads this revolt.

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s remarks prompted Marjorie Taylor-Green, a member of the far-right party, to criticize Occasio. However, the representative himself was expelled from the committees by the Democrats for his racist remarks. “I was in a room where he was constantly lying,” said Ocasio-Cortez, who represents the leaders.

This is just a simple example of blowing fire that Biden wants to put out. He has not yet been able to put out the fire that Trump lit in the first months of 2021, indicating that Trump is back to conservative life. There was also talk in March of new voting restrictions, a victory for conservatives.

Distortion of facts

If intense political rhetoric is not enough to prove that the United States is divided, a Reuters poll could cover that claim and show how difficult Biden’s path to unity is. A Reuters poll found that 60 percent of Republicans still believe Trump’s allegations of vote-rigging are true. Even 38% of Republicans said they strongly agree with this statement. However, there is no credible evidence of widespread fraud and vote theft. These sentiments allow conservative lawmakers and governors to seek new restrictions on voting under the guise of “electoral health.”

Georgia, which Republican campaign officials believed did not rig Biden’s victory in that state and even sent two Democrats to Congress in the Senate election, passed a new voter restriction law last month. Contrary to what Biden said at the inauguration ceremony, the text of the bill shows that full-blown war is still going on, and restrictions on voters are the most important sign to blow the fire of discord. Georgia law, which includes stricter voter identification requirements and gives the state election board authority to exercise control over local polling stations, has drawn strong criticism from Democrats who are concerned about its impact on black voters and potential election administration policy. Not only has the fire of war not been extinguished, but it has also been kindled.

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