President Joe Biden (right) shakes hands with President-elect Donald Trump during a meeting in the Oval Office of the White House on Nov. 13, 2024.
President Joe Biden (right) shakes hands with President-elect Donald Trump during a meeting in the Oval Office of the White House on Nov. 13, 2024.

In a scene to begin showcasing the peaceful transfer of power President Joe Biden, 81, and President-elect Donald Trump, 78, shared a cordial exchange in the Oval Office. While this moment shows two powerful, white and elderly men a week after the contentious and stressful presidential election, it is strikingly at odds with the grim reality many Black Americans now face with Trumpโ€™s reelection.ย 

While Biden extended a warm โ€œwelcome backโ€ to his predecessor and successor, for many African Americans and other marginalized groups, the moment marked something else entirely: the return of a leader who has made explicit promises to dismantle the civil rights framework that barely holds at the edges in the nation.

โ€œPrivilege meeting privilege isnโ€™t just about two men shaking hands,” said one administration official who asked to remain anonymous and who will be without a job come January 20. โ€œItโ€™s about a system that protects itself, a system that tells Black America, โ€˜Itโ€™s your turn to wait โ€” again.โ€™โ€

Trump is adamant about his intentions, thanks to his renewed mandate. Among his stated goals, which include dismantling the Department of Education, defunding historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs), and killing any remote chance that African Americans could finally receive reparations for centuries of racism and discrimination.ย 

Trump has signaled he would extend reparative measures to white college students who, he asserts, have been harmed by diversity, equity, and inclusion policies. Heโ€™s vowed to ramp up law enforcement efforts targeting minority communities, with plans to reinstate controversial stop-and-frisk laws, grant sweeping immunity to police, and dismantle the Department of Justiceโ€™s civil rights division.

For Biden, the White House meeting on Wednesday may have been just another statesmanlike duty, another handshake for the cameras. But for Black Americans, the stakes are disturbingly real. 

The promise of a Trump administration heavy-handed in law enforcement and dismissive of civil rights is not a distant threat; itโ€™s an imminent one. As Biden offered his congratulations, Black Americans, knowing that white women and white men were responsible for the 2024 election results, were left with the image of a president who appeared shielded by privilege, watching as the same Oval Office welcomed back a leader intent on unraveling hard-fought protections.

As the fire crackled behind the two in the Oval Office, Biden wished for a smooth transition โ€” ironically, the same gesture Trump had denied him four years ago โ€” and Black America could only look on with trepidation and the unmistakable privilege that white America has fought so viciously to deny people of color. Under Trump, Black Americans saw police-involved deaths rise, racist rhetoric embolden hate groups, and policies favoring predominantly white and affluent communities. Now, with the incoming Trump-led administration reinvigorated, communities across the nation are bracing themselves for policies that echo Jim Crowโ€™s shadow.

In this return to power, Trump brings with him a promise of transformation โ€” one that may bear little good news for communities of color. His rhetoric on law enforcement paints a vision of a โ€œpolice state,โ€ where โ€œorderโ€ is synonymous with marginalization and where civil liberties are an afterthought. The administrationโ€™s proposed reforms under Project 2025 or Agenda 47 promise further marginalization of those already most affected by systemic injustices.

As Biden shook Trumpโ€™s hand, the widening chasm between the lived experience of Black people and the political theater of the day was apparent. The Oval Office, currently lined with portraits of figures like Franklin Delano Roosevelt and the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., likely will be replaced by Confederates who remain heroes of Trump and those ensconced in the MAGA movement. Trump has spoken openly of his opposition to removing Confederate monuments and relics that honor those who fought to retain slavery in America.

While the two men smiled and shook hands, itโ€™s likely that the lives of Biden and Trump and many who look like them โ€” particularly those who enjoy their wealth โ€” will, at worst, remain unchanged. In contrast, Black Americans โ€” and other communities of color โ€” are set to face an administration chomping at the bit to eradicate all civil rights protections afforded minorities. Trumpโ€™s approach has already emboldened hate groups, stirred racist sentiments, and further divided the nation.

Still, Biden offered a โ€œsmooth transitionโ€ to a man who promised to tighten the grip of authority on communities that have fought hardest for equity and justice.

โ€œWhile they exchange niceties, Black America holds its breath, knowing that the fight for justice got a lot harder,โ€ the Biden administration official said.

Stacy M. Brown is a senior writer for The Washington Informer and the senior national correspondent for the Black Press of America. Stacy has more than 25 years of journalism experience and has authored...

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2 Comments

  1. I find it surprising that seemingly intelligent people actually think Donald Trump is that terrible. I promise your slavery concerns will be unfounded and as far as reparations for slavery? I didnโ€™t participate in it, you didnโ€™t participate in it. I didnโ€™t support it, Iโ€™m not paying reparation for a piece of history I wasnโ€™t alive for. Iโ€™m thinking Native Americans would like reparations also. As would Japan for the bombs. Sorry we canโ€™t pay everyone, Some one has to apply common sense somewhere

  2. That’s the sign of saying that we as black folks are either down the tubes or we are going down the tubes because we allowing it to happen.

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