Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Enough talk — now it’s time to vote

Our long, national nightmare is over

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Can we vote now? Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump met Wednesday night for their third and final presidenti­al debate. Appropriat­ely enough, they shared a stage in Las Vegas.

The only sure bet in this surreal campaign is that the Republican nominee would say or do something outrageous. He did not disappoint.

Donald Trump, the real estate mogul and reality TV star, once again stole the headlines with his assertion that he will not necessaril­y accept the results of next month’s election if he loses to Democrat Hillary Clinton.

His comment drew an audible gasp from the audience gathered on the campus of the University of Las Vegas.

Trump’s comment earned him another round of condemnati­ons. His brash talk was labeled a “great disservice” to the country and “beyond the pale.”

And those were the Republican reactions.

Trump’s comments came on the heels of several weeks in which he had adapted the campaign tactic of pushing the notion that the election was somehow “rigged” by a cabal of Democrats, left-wingers and their minions in the media.

Make no mistake. This is dangerous talk, albeit hardly surprising coming as simply the latest unconventi­onal bombast from a most unconventi­onal candidate.

This is perhaps even more damaging than some of the other lowlights of the Trump candidacy — his crude, vulgar references to women, his castigatio­n of immigrants, his calls for a ban on Muslims entering the country, his disparagin­g of many entering the country.

Those comments merely smack of the persistent bias, misogyny and racism that have been bubbling just under the surface of his campaign.

But his assertions of a rigged election and his boast that he will “keep you in suspense” in terms of accepting the will of the people strikes at the heart of our democracy.

Trump’s damaging rhetoric will no doubt inflame his base, and raises the specter of millions of Americans not accepting what has been the backbone of 240 years of democracy.

Yes, Democrat Al Gore went to court to challenge the Florida vote in 2000, but the two are hardly similar. Gore was not offering a blanket rejection of the vote. Instead, he was challengin­g specific ballot problems in Florida. When the court ruled against him, he accepted it. Trump has given no indication he is willing to do likewise.

Not much else from Wednesday night is likely to be remembered, or change the mind of many voters.

Instead, Trump’s comments may simply move to turn off an electorate that seems more than ready to end this thing and go to the polls.

And that is the lesson to be learned here. This is about much more than Donald Trump. It is about a system that has served us well for a couple of centuries.

And also keep in mind there is much at stake aside from the presidenti­al follies. Here in Pennsylvan­ia we will be electing a U.S. senator, with Democrat Katie McGinty looking to unseat incumbent Republican Pat Toomey.

The race carries another interestin­g tidbit. While Hillary Clinton is looking to become the first woman ever elected president, likewise McGinty is trying to do pull off another first for women. That’s correct. Pennsylvan­ia has never sent a woman to the U.S. Senate. To that end, the race quickly has become the most expensive in the nation, with control of the Senate potentiall­y slipping from Republican to Democratic control.

We also will elect members of the U.S. House. In the 7th District, incumbent Republican Pat Meehan has seen more than enough of Mr. Trump. Two weeks ago he urged the man at the top of the ticket to step aside after the video of Trump making crude and demeaning remarks about women surfaced. Now Meehan, who is being opposed by Democrat Mary Ellen Balchunis, says he will not cast his ballot for the party’s standard bearer. Instead he will write in the name of Vice President Mike Pence.

The rest of us will decide his fate, along with a slew of state legislativ­e races.

These are important posts, making laws that likely have more effect on residents’ everyday lives than Donald Trump ever will.

Unlike many other states, Pennsylvan­ia remains one of the few that does not allow early voting. Aside from absentee ballots, we have to hold our water until Nov. 8 to make our choices.

But don’t allow that decision to be watered down. Make sure your vote.

Despite how turned off you are by two seriously challenged candidates.

Yes, we are fully aware that Hillary Clinton also has her issues.

But she has yet to give any indication she would not accept the will of the people. Maybe Trump is so used to looking down at the people, to issuing his trademark “you’re fired!” commands, that he’s forgotten how a democracy works.

The people’s vote is paramount.

His comments to the contrary are contrary to a system that has served us well for 240 years.

Given that span and the splendid history it contains, we can wait another two weeks.

Barely.

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