Trump still pushes lies
President’s vow to ‘fight on’ spells trouble for Biden
The 2020 presidential election is over. But President Donald Trump’s baseless efforts to undermine it, and the consequences of those undemocratic actions, will linger in America for far longer.
It is increasingly clear that there is no fact, no piece of evidence and no court ruling that will dissuade Trump from trying to mislead Americans about President-elect Joe Biden’s victory. And Trump hasn’t been alone; numerous Republicans have stood with him or stood by silently, including 126 GOP members of the House who backed a bid to get the Supreme Court to invalidate Biden’s victory in four key states.
The court emphatically rejected the case on Saturday.
Trump responded on Twitter, “The Supreme Court really let us down,” but he vowed to “fight on!”
The actions of Trump and his allies have exposed a striking reality about America: Many lawmakers in one of the nation’s two major political parties are either willing to back efforts to overturn a free and fair election or unwilling to speak out against such a campaign.
That lays the predicate for politicians to question the integrity of any election if the results don’t go a party
or a candidate’s way, a dangerous notion that is likely to further erode Americans’ trust in government and test the durability of the nation’s democratic institutions.
With the sitting president leading the way and friendly media outlets amplifying his claims, millions of Americans will likely remain convinced Biden’s victory was illegitimate and the election was fraudulent. A Quinnipiac University poll out this week said 77 per cent of Republicans believed there was widespread fraud in the election and about 60 per cent said Biden’s win was illegitimate.
In reality, Biden won 306 Electoral
College votes, the same number Trump carried four years ago in a victory he deemed a landslide. Biden also outpaced Trump by more than seven million votes nationwide.
“Since election night, a lot of people have been confusing voters by spinning Kenyan Birther-type, ‘Chavez rigged the election from the grave’ conspiracy theories,” said Senator Ben Sasse of Nebraska, one of the only Republican lawmakers to weigh in after Saturday’s high court ruling. “But every American who cares about the rule of law should take comfort that the Supreme Court — including all three of President Trump’s picks —
closed the book on that nonsense.”
Yet Sasse’s condemnation of the baseless conspiracies promulgated by Trump also hinted at their staying power.
Long before he became president, Trump was the chief proponent of the lie that President Barack Obama was born in Kenya, not the United States, and was ineligible to serve as president. There was ample evidence to the contrary, yet the lie lingered for years, fuelling animosity toward Obama among some GOP voters and making it more difficult for Republican leaders to work with him.
In his waning days in the White House, Trump is relying on a similar playbook against Biden. Trump’s election attacks have left many Republicans unwilling to acknowledge Biden’s victory and suggesting they may see little political incentive to work with him once he’s sworn in, despite the historic pandemic and economic uncertainty.