Las Vegas Review-Journal

Are we supposed to believe that only Republican­s legitimate­ly win elections?

It’s a story of escalation, from the relentless obstructio­n of the Gingrich era to the effort to impeach President Bill Clinton to the attempt to nullify the presidency of Barack Obama and on to the struggle, however doomed, to keep Joe Biden from ever si

- Jamelle Bouie Jamelle Bouie is a columnist for The New York Times.

Of the many stories to tell about American politics since the end of the Cold War, one of growing significan­ce is how the Republican Party came to believe in its singular legitimacy as a political actor. Whether it’s a hangover from the heady days of the Reagan revolution (when conservati­ves could claim ideologica­l hegemony) or something downstream of America’s reactionar­y traditions, it’s a belief that now dominates conservati­ve politics and has placed much of the Republican Party in opposition to republican government itself.

It’s a story of escalation, from the relentless obstructio­n of the Gingrich era to the effort to impeach President Bill Clinton to the attempt to nullify the presidency of Barack Obama and on to the struggle, however doomed, to keep Joe Biden from ever sitting in the White House as president. It also goes beyond national politics. In 2016, after a Democrat, Roy Cooper, defeated the Republican incumbent Pat Mccrory for the governorsh­ip of North Carolina, the state’s Republican legislatur­e promptly stripped the office of power and authority. Wisconsin Republican­s did the same in 2018 after Tony Evers unseated Scott Walker in his bid for a third term. And Michigan Republican­s took similar steps against another Democrat, Gretchen Whitmer, after her successful race for the governor’s mansion.

Considered in the context of a 30-year assault on the legitimacy of Democratic leaders and Democratic constituen­cies (of which Republican-led voter suppressio­n is an important part), the present attempt to disrupt and derail the certificat­ion of electoral votes is but the next step, in which Republican­s say, outright, that a Democrat has no right to hold power and try to make that reality. The next Democrat to win the White House — whether it’s Biden getting reelected or someone else winning for the first time — will almost certainly face the same flood of accusation­s, challenges and lawsuits, on the same false grounds of “fraud.”

It’s worth emphasizin­g the bad faith and dishonesty on display here. A full 138 House Republican­s voted against counting certain electoral votes Wednesday. Among them were newly seated lawmakers in Georgia and Pennsylvan­ia, two states whose votes were in contention. But the logic of their objection applies to them as well as Biden. If his state victories are potentiall­y illegitima­te, so are theirs. Or take the charge, from Ted Cruz and other Senate Republican­s, that multiple key swing states changed (or even violated) their election laws in contravent­ion of the Constituti­on. If it’s true for those cases, then it’s also true of Texas, where Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, unilateral­ly expanded voting, however meagerly. And yet there’s no drive to cancel those results.

The issue for Republican­s is not election integrity, it’s the fact that Democratic votes count at all.

That said, not every Republican has joined the president’s crusade against self-government. Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas shares the presidenti­al ambitions of Cruz and Josh Hawley and others who want to disrupt the electoral vote count. But where they see opportunit­y, he sees blowback. Here he is in a statement released by his office:

If Congress purported to overturn the results of the Electoral College, it would not only exceed that power, but also establish unwise precedents. First, Congress would take away the power to choose the president from the people, which would essentiall­y end presidenti­al elections and place that power in the hands of whichever party controls Congress. Second, Congress would imperil the Electoral College, which gives small states like Arkansas a voice in presidenti­al elections. Democrats could achieve their longstandi­ng goal of eliminatin­g the Electoral College in effect by refusing to count electoral votes in the future for a Republican president-elect.

So do seven of his Republican colleagues in the House, who similarly argue that this stunt will undermine the Republican Party’s ability to win presidenti­al elections:

From a purely partisan perspectiv­e, Republican presidenti­al candidates have won the national popular vote only once in the last 32 years. They have therefore depended on the Electoral College for nearly all presidenti­al victories in the last generation. If we perpetuate the notion that Congress may disregard certified electoral votes — based solely on its own assessment that one or more states mishandled the presidenti­al election — we will be delegitimi­zing the very system that led Donald Trump to victory in 2016, and that could provide the only path to victory in 2024.

But even as they stand against the effort to challenge the results, these Republican­s affirm the baseless idea that there was fraud and abuse in the election. Cotton says he “shares the concerns of many Arkansans about irregulari­ties in the presidenti­al election,” while the House lawmakers say that they “are outraged at the significan­t abuses in our election system resulting from the reckless adop

tion of mail-in ballots and the lack of safeguards maintained to guarantee that only legitimate votes are cast and counted.” Even as they criticize an attempted power grab, they echo the idea that one side has legitimate voters and the other does not.

It’s hard to say how anyone can shatter this belief in the Republican Party’s singular right to govern. The most we can do, in this moment, is rebuke the attempt to overturn the election in as strong a manner as possible. If Trump broke the law with his phone call to Brad Raffensper­ger, the secretary of state of Georgia — in which he pressured Raffensper­ger to “find” votes on his behalf — then Trump should be pursued like any other citizen who attempted to subvert an election. He should be impeached as well, even if there’s less than two weeks left in his term, and the lawmakers who support him should be censured and condemned.

The question now is whether the events of the past two months will stand as precedent, a guide for those who might emulate Trump.

The door to overturnin­g a presidenti­al election is open. The rules — or at least a tortured, politicall­y motivated reading of the rules — make it possible. Moreover, it is a simple reality of political systems that what can happen eventually will happen. It may not be in four years, it may not be in eight, but if the Republican Party continues along this path, it will run this play again. And there’s nothing to say it can’t work.

 ?? SAMUEL CORUM / GETTY IMAGES FILE (2020) ?? Sen. Ted Cruz, R-texas, listens as Sen. Ben Sasse, R-neb., speaks Oct. 14 on Capitol Hill in Washington.
SAMUEL CORUM / GETTY IMAGES FILE (2020) Sen. Ted Cruz, R-texas, listens as Sen. Ben Sasse, R-neb., speaks Oct. 14 on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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