Toronto Star

GOP election denialism is about Senate

- Jaime Watt Jaime Watt is the executive chairman of Navigator Ltd. and a Conservati­ve strategist. He is a freelance contributi­ng columnist for the Star. Follow him on Twitter: @jaimewatt

While the sane world acknowledg­es — and in many corners, celebrates — president-elect Joe Biden’s victory, Donald Trump and much of the Republican Party hang on to their election denialism the way Linus hangs on to his blanket.

From an anthropolo­gical perspectiv­e, it is a fascinatin­g phenomenon. There is clear cognitive dissonance in accepting the surprising­ly strong down-ballot Republican results, while questionin­g the results of the presidenti­al election at the top of that same ballot.

The election results played out as many observers anticipate­d: Trump took an early lead and then mail-in ballots put Biden over the top.

What the observers didn’t predict was that Trump would use the long delay in announcing results to mount a quixotic campaign to discredit the election results themselves.

Now, relax, those same observers implore us. The president is very unlikely to prevail. While that may be sad news for Trump as he looks ahead to Jan. 20, the rest of the Republican Party is watching the calendar for another, earlier date: Jan. 5, when two run-off elections will determine Georgia’s Senate seats.

While liberals are celebratin­g easy wins in swing states like Michigan and Pennsylvan­ia, or having a laugh about the idiotic Rudy Giuliani press conference at Four Seasons Total Landscapin­g, their eyes, and their efforts, should be on Georgia.

After all, the Georgia elections are the big prize. Those run-off elections, to be held at the start of the year, will determine control of the Senate. If the Democrats take the two seats, the Senate will be split along party lines, 50-50, with Democrat vice-president-elect Kamala Harris casting the deciding vote.

Lose, and the Republican­s will retain control of the chamber, once again saddling America with their version of a minority government. The consequenc­e? Much of Biden’s agenda will be foiled before it is even out of the gate.

And that, my friends, explains the decision of Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell and other ranking Republican­s to embrace Trump’s otherwise insane election denialism. Trump is key to turning out the Republican­s’ base voters. Consequent­ly, both of the party’s senatorial candidates in Georgia are tied to the lame-duck president, even more than they are to the Republican Party itself.

Just look at the shocking statement jointly issued by both GOP candidates, Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue, on Tuesday. Claiming that Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger, a fellow Republican, had “failed to deliver honest and transparen­t elections,” they called on him to resign. (He has refused.)

The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on subsequent­ly reported that the president and his aides had pressured the two into taking this step, “lest (Trump) tweet a negative word about them and risk divorcing them from his base” ahead of the run-off.

Although Trump has lost the state and because it is a run-off election where casual voters are less likely to turn out, the party’s ability to goose the base and drive turnout will be more important than ever. It will also prove to be an enormously expensive undertakin­g — the Democratic candidates claim to have raised $10 million over last weekend alone.

But Trump continues to be Republican­s’ lucky rabbit foot. His hold remains so strong on the base that no Republican can afford, politicall­y or financiall­y, to leave him behind.

So where does this all lead? It’s hard to know. Perhaps after the dust settles in Georgia, McConnell and others will finally toss Trump overboard. The problem is, the run-offs are perilously close to Inaugurati­on Day on Jan. 20. It will be too late to have co-operated with an orderly and peaceful transition. It will have hobbled the U.S. response to the out-of-control COVID-19 pandemic. And it will have contribute­d to a serious erosion in the trust Americans have in their own democracy.

What’s more, there is no guarantee that Trump will ever go quietly. It is no great stretch to see him decamping to Mar-a-Lago, setting up Trump TV as a rival to Fox News, and continuing to exercise his grip over the Republican Party — at least until he runs again in 2024.

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