The government is totally disrupted and there is no way for any competent individual to be able to pick up the pieces and make lemonade out of the available lemons.
2020 has been, well, . . . a year. And things are a bit surreal at the moment. When I despair of the state of our government I look to Winston Churchill:
. . . which could be a slogan for this website, I think.
And besides, we are past the Winter Solstice (December 21 by the calendar or possibly November 3rd for other reasons, depending on your point of view) and Spring not that far away! And there is Golden Boy to look forward to!
I thought it was Churchill, but it turns out that the English theologian and historian Thomas Fuller appears to be the first person to commit the notion that 'the darkest hour is just before the dawn' to print. His religious travelogue A Pisgah-Sight Of Palestine And The Confines Thereof, 1650, contains this view:
It is always darkest just before the Day dawneth.
The source of the proverb isn't known. It may be Fuller himself, or he may have been recording a piece of folk wisdom. In 1858, much later than Fuller of course, Samuel Lover attributed the notion to the Irish, in Songs and Ballads:
There is a beautiful saying amongst the Irish peasantry to inspire hope under adverse circumstances:- "Remember," they say, "that the darkest hour of all. is the hour before day."