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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWaPo OpEd : Trump is setting us up for an Election Day nightmare
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/trump-is-setting-us-up-for-an-election-day-nightmare/2020/07/23/559183b4-cd22-11ea-b0e3-d55bda07d66a_story.htmlWe should not be shocked by President Trumps admission, in an interview this week with Chris Wallace, that he might not accept the results of the November election. After all, he said that before the 2016 election as well. Yet the situation now is far more dangerous. For months, Trump has been unleashing forces that, come November, could cause tens of millions of Americans to be convinced the election was rigged. Even if Trump leaves office in January voluntarily or not he will likely leave behind a political climate that verges on civil war. Trump is an avid fan of conspiracy theories. His political rise began with one the notion that Barack Obama was born in Kenya and he has embraced the most noxious peddler of falsehoods, Alex Jones. Trump and his associates have been stoking the QAnon movement, which imagines a battle between the president and a deep state of high-ranking officials and liberal elites who practice child torture and satanic worship. All these instincts are now being channeled into one idea, one great conspiracy: that the November vote will be rigged.
Some take comfort from the polls, believing presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden will win with a large enough margin to make all these concerns irrelevant. Maybe. But it is also quite possible things will get very messy. The polls might prove even less useful this year than they were in 2016. Assuming we are still in the midst of a pandemic raging across the country, all 50 states will have instituted new measures related to voting, from social distancing rules to mail-in ballots. These will vary widely from state to state. Norm Ornstein writes in the Atlantic, The combination of fewer polling places because of the pandemic, the need to space out voters in lines, and fewer poll workers could turn November 3 into a disaster that spirals into January. Imagine that on the night of Nov. 3, backed-up polling sites turn away voters and several states have large enough stacks of mail-in ballots that they cannot announce their results immediately (somewhat like the Iowa caucuses debacle). Imagine that some procedures or ballots are contested. Imagine that this ends up in courts around the country.
By Dec. 8, each state is supposed to decide which partys slate of electors will cast that states electoral votes, reflecting the official ballot tally. But what if that tally is unclear or disputed? For years, people have worried about the problem of faithless electors, but the real problem this fall might be confusion and delay, said Jared Cohen, the author of Accidental Presidents. He points out that the 2020 election could prove to be a toxic combination of the elections of 1876 and 2000. In 1876, four states faced serious allegations of irregularities or fraud, and the situation was resolved by a backroom deal. In 2000, a dispute over Floridas ballots led the Supreme Court to intervene (in an unprecedented and highly controversial move), settling the election in favor of George W. Bush. What happens this fall will take place in the midst of the most polarized political climate in a century and with the hyper-accelerant of social media. Now add to this scenario the most worrisome element: the conspiracy theorists who have already been peddling fear and suspicion of the establishment, and specifically warning that the election will be rigged. If Trumps prospects worsen as November approaches, his attacks are likely to get more outlandish.
He has already claimed in the past that large numbers of undocumented immigrants, out-of-state residents and dead people were voting for the Democrats. He recently insisted there is ZERO chance Mail-In Ballots will be anything less than substantially fraudulent because Mail boxes will be robbed, ballots will be forged. He says foreign countries will print counterfeit mail-in ballots by the millions. None of these charges are backed up with proof. Americans like conspiracy theories. Theirs is a country suspicious of centralized power, and these theories help people make sense of the world. People dislike the idea of chaos and chance, preferring to see patterns, causes and villains. This tendency exists on the left as well, whether its Oliver Stones portrayal of the JFK assassination or the belief that Russia hacked into voting machines in 2016 and changed the tallies. But there is an important difference between the 2020 candidates: Trump revels in conspiracy theories; Biden does not. One of Americas greatest legacies to the world has been the peaceful transfer of political power. When John Adams left the White House in 1801 and Thomas Jefferson was sworn in as his successor, it marked the first time in modern history that power changed hands between two rival parties competing in an election. It is that precious legacy that Trump is endangering with his conspiracy-mongering about rigged elections.
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WaPo OpEd : Trump is setting us up for an Election Day nightmare (Original Post)
Celerity
Jul 2020
OP
Thekaspervote
(32,819 posts)1. Read and remember the last sentence of the piece posted here
His conspiracy mongering.
Be aware, vote in person if you can, but dont give up hope or spread his conspiracy theories
aquamarina
(1,865 posts)2. Well then
We the People will just have to force his orange ass to accept it.
bluestarone
(17,101 posts)3. I believe we can count on it!! Right out of putins playbook!
We just have to figure out WHAT WOULD putin DO?
crickets
(25,989 posts)4. K&R for visibility.