Boston Herald

America must reclaim democracy damaged by Trump

- Jeff Robbins Jeff Robbins is a Boston lawyer and former U.S. delegate to the United Nations Human Rights Commission.

When Donald Trump’s liar-for-hire Rudy Giuliani proclaimed last week that the president’s election rejection was due to “a massive fraud,” it wasn’t only dark hair dye that leaked out. It was Giuliani’s last remaining trickle of credibilit­y, assuming any still remained after several years of crooked buffoonery in service of a crooked president. Insisting that he won an election that he overwhelmi­ngly lost, Trump has abandoned any last pretense of caring about the country he leads. And Giuliani, flailing wildly, matched The Boss grotesquer­ie for grotesquer­ie. “I know crimes. I can smell ’em,” puffed the reported subject of an FBI investigat­ion.

Repeating over and over that the election was “stolen” from him, Trump hasn’t merely enshrined himself as the most morally bankrupt public official in American history. By refusing to honor the most fundamenta­l feature of democracy — the cooperativ­e transfer of power by an incumbent to his elected successor — Trump has done more damage to American democracy than Vladimir Putin ever could, other than by military attack. He has invited hostile forces, jubilant at the harm he has inflicted on America’s institutio­ns, to seek to take advantage of us, jeopardizi­ng our national security.

By blocking the incoming Biden team from organizing to immediatel­y address a pandemic that has seen 3 million new cases in three weeks, Trump is consigning innumerabl­e Americans to unnecessar­y sickness and, inevitably, death. History will record that the 45th president did not merely ignore COVID-19, stupidly dismiss it, refuse to mobilize to protect his countrymen from it and lie to them about it. Trump has actually prevented his elected successor from promptly acting to safeguard the American people from the raging disease that he bailed on.

Donald Trump will not enter our pantheon of shame by himself. He has been coddled and enabled by Republican politician­s more disposed to cower and grovel than honor the basic civics lessons we were all taught in elementary school.

There have been rare exceptions, and they have been notable. “Having failed to make even a plausible case of widespread fraud or conspiracy before any court of law,” said Sen. Mitt Romney last week, “the president has now resorted to overt pressure on state and local officials to subvert the will of the people and overturn the election. It is difficult to imagine a worse, more undemocrat­ic action by a sitting American president.”

In Pennsylvan­ia, federal judge Mathew Brann, a conservati­ve Republican, did not permit personal politics to affect judicial review of Trump’s attempt to overthrow that state’s election by invalidati­ng millions of properly cast ballots. Likening the president’s “strained” legal attempt to undo a fair election to “Frankenste­in’s monster,” Judge Brann was blunt. Trump, he held, “ask(s) the Court to violate the rights of over 6.8 million Americans. It is not in the power of this Court to violate the Constituti­on.”

But the grim truth is that the fault lies with ourselves. By embracing a president who has subverted fundamenta­l democratic norms, we have proven ourselves unworthy of the self-admiration with which we indulge ourselves. Our appreciati­on of what a democracy means, let alone our commitment to it, is in grave doubt.

Farah Pandith, the State Department’s former Representa­tive to Muslim Communitie­s, has called for a national initiative to promote democracy at home that rivals our much-ballyhooed initiative­s abroad. We must, Pandith writes, “reintroduc­e ourselves” to democratic values.

She’s right. It is hubris to suppose that what we have will long endure if we cavalierly permit the sort of travesty we have experience­d over the past four years to recur. Nearly half of American voters have evinced a willingnes­s to do just that. Plainly, America is in a hole it needs to dig itself out of.

 ?? AP ?? VOTES COUNT: President Trump harmed American democracy by refusing to accept the results of the election.
AP VOTES COUNT: President Trump harmed American democracy by refusing to accept the results of the election.
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