Khaleej Times

THE POPULAR VOTE IN THE US

- Eric Posner, a professor at the University of Chicago Law School. —Project Syndicate ERIC POSNER

Joe Biden has survived a gruelling election campaign and a cliff-hanger election. Next, he must fend off legal challenges from US President Donald Trump’s campaign. While he will enter the White House on January 20, 2021, he will wonder when he gets there whether the prize he sought for so long is a poisoned chalice.

A President Biden will most likely enter office confrontin­g widespread economic distress, the seasonal escalation of a deadly pandemic, and a brutal internatio­nal environmen­t. These challenges would test even the most skilled leader. But Biden will be further hampered by a divided government, a hostile judiciary, a weakened federal bureaucrac­y, and lingering Trumpian populism among the public.

In the past, a newly elected president could expect some cooperatio­n from the opposing party in passing legislatio­n. Biden should expect nothing of the kind. Republican members of Congress largely beat expectatio­ns in the election and will see no reason for compromise. If Republican­s retain their majority in the Senate, they can and will try to undermine the Biden administra­tion, to create the conditions for an anti-Democratic backlash in the 2022 midterm elections. Progressiv­e bills will be dead on arrival, and sorely needed constituti­onal reforms of the Electoral College, voting laws, and the presidency will not occur. More likely, Americans will have to endure sporadic government shutdowns amid a cold civil war that maintains a status quo of paralysis – at best.

Many of Biden’s nomination­s will also face hostility in a Republican-controlled Senate. Republican­s probably will not deny him a secretary of state or an attorney general, but they will ensure that the executive branch is understaff­ed. Having incurred no electoral punishment for their hardball tactics over judicial nomination­s, they will block and delay all confirmati­ons of federal judges.

Even if Democrats win a majority in the Senate, Biden will face formidable obstacles. With the confirmati­on of Amy Coney Barrett a week before the election, Republican­s will enjoy a 6-3 majority on a Supreme Court that was already leaning more rightward than any court since the 1930s. Today’s Court will continue chipping away at the legal foundation­s of US regulatory agencies and advancing socially conservati­ve values, as it has for the last two decades. Even if Biden can push progressiv­e legislatio­n through a divided Congress, he will still face the prospect of the Court striking it down. Indeed, the Court might finally deal a deathblow to the Affordable Care Act, the signature achievemen­t of Biden’s former boss, Barack Obama.

With a likely understaff­ed executive branch and a hostile judiciary, Biden will have trouble exercising executive power. Federal agencies have suffered a loss of morale – and qualified staff – during the Trump era, and will most likely take quite a while to regroup. Efforts to undo the damage that Trump did to environmen­tal, health, and safety regulation will come slowly from the depleted agencies, and all changes will be met with judicial skepticism from Republican-appointed – and especially Trump-appointed – federal judges.

Similarly, ambitious uses of regulatory and executive power to reform immigratio­n or address climate change (on the model pioneered by Obama) will receive a frigid reception at the Court. Biden will inherit substantia­l legal authority to take measures to contain the pandemic; but Trump-appointed judges will push back when that authority conflicts with religious liberty and property rights.

Finally, there is the elusive issue of public opinion. Though Biden won the popular vote, the American electorate remains deeply divided. Trump’s lawsuits claiming electoral fraud are unlikely to succeed, but his attempts to persuade Republican voters that Democrats stole the election will likely have a lasting effect. If Trump succeeds in delegitimi­sing the outcome in the eyes of enough voters, Biden will have even more trouble securing support for his policies from alienated Republican­s and their elected representa­tives. Moreover, Biden also will be contending with a fractious Democratic coalition that could explode at any moment into a battle among leftists, moderates, and anti-Trump independen­ts.

For these reasons, Biden will not benefit from the traditiona­l honeymoon period that other newly elected presidents have enjoyed. He ran as a unifier, but, like Obama before him, he will quickly learn that you cannot win over those who despise you.

That said, Trump’s defeat is a triumph for American democracy. Trump has been the most divisive and destructiv­e president of modern times. His failure to win a second term, despite the numerous advantages of incumbency, will send a signal to ambitious politician­s that populism and demagoguer­y are not the keys to victory. The moment should be savored for that reason – if for nothing else.

Though Biden won the popular vote, the American electorate remains deeply divided.

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