World media react to Biden win
 
 
With headlines like 'God Bless America', powerful
media outlets around the world welcomed the defeat of Donald Trump but warned
president-elect Joe Biden faced enormous challenges in healing the United
States.
The international press also focused on the feat of
Kamala Harris, Biden's running mate who will become the United States' first
female black vice president.
"A new dawn for America," read the
headline of The Independent in Britain, showing a photo of Biden standing next
to Harris and noting her historic achievement.
The Sunday Times went with a picture of a
celebrating black woman draped in the US flag and the headline: "Sleepy
Joe wakes up America", taunting Trump by using the derogatory nickname he
had used for Biden.
The Sunday People tabloid blared in capital letters:
"GOD BLESS AMERICA."
Germany's mass-market Bild newspaper carried a photo
of Trump with a headline: "Exit without dignity".
"What a liberation, what a relief,"
reported Germany's left-leaning Suddeutsche Zeitung broadsheet.
But it noted that Biden "inherits a heavy
burden" like nothing faced by his predecessors, and warned that Trump
accepting defeat was "unthinkable".
In Australia, the Daily Telegraph tabloid owned by
Rupert Murdoch's media empire also focused on Trump's expected defiance and
described him as a "hotball of fury".
"(Trump) will simply not accept the humiliation
of seemingly being beaten by a foe he perceived to be feeble and barely worth
turning up to fight," it said.
Brazil's leading media outlets reported Trump's
defeat in the context of its own populist leader, Jair Bolsonaro, who has
similarly sought to diminish democratic institutions and reject science-based
facts.
"Trump's defeat punishes the attacks against
civilisation, it is a lesson for Bolsonaro," wrote Folha de Sao Paulo, one
of Brazil's major daily newspapers.
"May Brazil's leaders seize the spirit of the
times -- or die, like Trump, who has already left it too late."
Spain's centre-right El Mundo newspaper said Biden's
was a goodbye to Trump's populism, and described Harris as a "symbol of
renewal".
Sweden's biggest daily, Dagens Nyheter, headlined
its opinion-editorial piece: "Bittersweet victory -- Biden will struggle
to heal the US".
It described Biden's vow of a return to normalcy as
"mission impossible".
"The election result shows a deeply divided
country, and it will be difficult for Biden to carry out the reform programme
he has promised his core voters," the paper wrote.
Sweden's conservative Svenska Dagbladet daily warned
of the dangers posed by the many millions of Americans who will continue to
believe Trump's dangerous rhetoric that the election had been stolen from him.
"Election is over -- but conflict
continues," read its headline.
"Half the country -- half of those who voted at
least -- may have a lingering feeling that something is very wrong after months
of battles and voices calling the election itself into question. That the
election system itself is rigged and can't be trusted."
On a lighter note, the Ayrshire Daily News, whose
patch covers the Trump Turnberry golf course in Scotland, took a more local
look at the result. 
"South Ayrshire golf club owner loses 2020
presidential election," read its headline.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


