Weekend Herald

The other pandemic: The one infecting US democracy

- Paul Krugman

If you aren’t terrified both by Covid-19 and by its economic consequenc­es, you haven’t been paying attention.

Even though social distancing may be slowing the disease’s spread, tens of thousands more Americans will surely die in the months ahead (and official accounts surely understate the true death toll). And the economic lockdown necessary to achieve social distancing — as I’ve been saying, the economy is in the equivalent of a medically induced coma — has led to almost 33 million new claims for unemployme­nt insurance, again almost certainly an understate­ment of true job losses.

Yet one of scariest stories to come out of the pandemic didn’t involve epidemiolo­gy or economics; it was the travesty of an election in Wisconsin, where the Supreme Court required that in-person voting proceed despite the health risks and the fact that many who requested absentee ballots never got them.

Why was this so scary? Because it shows that America as we know it may not survive much longer. The pandemic will eventually end; the economy will eventually recover. But democracy, once lost, may never come back. And the United States is much closer to losing its democracy than many people realise.

To see how a modern democracy can die, look at events in Europe, especially Hungary, over the past decade.

What happened in Hungary, beginning in 2011, was that Fidesz, the nation’s white nationalis­t ruling party, took advantage of its position to rig the electoral system, effectivel­y making its rule permanent. Then it further consolidat­ed its control, using political power to reward friendly businesses while punishing critics, and moved to suppress independen­t news media.

Until recently, it seemed as if Viktor Orban, Hungary’s de facto dictator, might stop with soft authoritar­ianism, presiding over a regime that preserved some of the outward forms of democracy, neutralisi­ng and punishing opposition without actually making criticism illegal. But now his government has used the coronaviru­s as an excuse to abandon even the pretence of constituti­onal government, giving Orban the power to rule by decree.

If you say that something similar can’t happen in the US, you’re hopelessly naive. In fact, it’s already happening there, especially at the state level. Wisconsin, in particular, is well on its way towards becoming

The state GOP was nakedly exploiting a pandemic to disenfranc­hise those likely to vote against it.

Hungary on Lake Michigan, as Republican­s seek a permanent lock on power.

The story so far: back in 2018, Wisconsin’s electorate voted strongly for Democratic control. Voters chose a Democratic governor, and gave 53 per cent of their support to Democratic candidates for the state Assembly. But the state is so heavily gerrymande­red that despite this popular-vote majority, Democrats got only 36 per cent of the Assembly’s seats.

And far from trying to reach some accommodat­ion with the governor-elect, Republican­s moved to effectivel­y emasculate him, drasticall­y reducing the powers of his office.

Then came the election in Wisconsin. In normal times most attention would have been focused on the Democratic primary — although that became a moot point when Bernie Sanders suspended his campaign. But a seat on the state Supreme Court was also at stake.

Yet Wisconsin, like most of the country, is under a stay-at-home order. So why did Republican legislator­s, eventually backed by the Republican appointees to the US Supreme Court, insist on holding an election as if the situation were normal?

The answer is that the state shutdown had a much more severe impact on voting in Democratic­leaning urban areas, where a great majority of polling places were closed, than in rural or suburban areas. So the state GOP was nakedly exploiting a pandemic to disenfranc­hise those likely to vote against it. What we saw in Wisconsin, in short, was a state party doing whatever it takes to cling to power even if a majority of voters wants it out — and a partisan bloc on the US Supreme Court backing its efforts. Donald Trump, as usual, said the quiet part out loud: If we expand early voting and voting by mail, “you’d never have a Republican elected in this country again”.

Does anyone seriously doubt that something similar could happen, very soon, at a national level?

This November, it’s all too possible that Trump will eke out an Electoral College win thanks to widespread voter suppressio­n. If he does — or even if he wins cleanly — everything we’ve seen suggests that he will use a second term to punish everyone he sees as a domestic enemy, and that his party will back him all the way. That is, America will do a full Hungary.

What if Trump loses? You know what he’ll do: He’ll claim that Joe Biden’s victory was based on voter fraud, that millions of unauthoris­ed immigrants cast ballots or something like that. Would the Republican Party, and perhaps more important, Fox News, support his refusal to accept reality? What do you think?

So that’s why what just happened in Wisconsin scares me more than either disease or depression. For it shows that one of our two major parties simply doesn’t believe in democracy.

Authoritar­ian rule may be just around the corner.

 ??  ?? Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban

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