Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

A NEW LOW FOR CIVILITY

- By Doyle McManus

If you’re wondering when American politics hit its low point in civility, I’d nominate Aug. 6, 2020. That was the day when President Trump had this to say about his rival for the presidency, lifelong Catholic Joe Biden: “He’s against God.”

Partisan polarizati­on has been part of American politics for decades, but in 2020 our national fault line expanded into dangerous new territory: demonizati­on and delegitimi­zation.

In his reelection campaign, Trump didn’t merely denounce Biden and other Democrats as misguided; he accused them of being enemies of the nation — and being evil.

“They’re vicious, horrible people,” he said at one campaign rally.

“They hate our country,” he said at another.

That isn’t normal political language in the United States, not even in the heat of an election campaign. And when a president abandons all norms of civility, the problem is bigger than a mere lapse in etiquette; his words and actions encourage others to behave badly, too.

Democracy rests on a principle of mutual tolerance: We may hate our opponents’ ideas, but we accept their legitimacy and their right to compete just as they accept ours.

Think, for example, of what Republican presidenti­al nominee John McCain said of Democratic nominee Barack Obama during their 2008 campaign: “He’s a decent family man [and] citizen that I just happen to have disagreeme­nts with on fundamenta­l issues.” That’s the norm we once expected our politician­s to maintain.

Now imagine Trump saying anything close to that.

When protests erupted after Minneapoli­s police killed George Floyd, an unarmed Black man, most presidents would have called for calm and national unity; Trump seized the moment to attack Democratic governors and mayors.

His norm-busting campaign of division extended even to the COVID-19 pandemic.

“If you take the blue states out … we’re really at a very low level,” he claimed in September. (The assertion was not merely false; it was wildly false.)

Polarizing language has consequenc­es. A Pew Research Center poll in October found that about 9 in 10 voters in both parties said they believed an election victory by the other side would result in “lasting harm” to the country.

That’s a dangerous trend. “When one group views the other as a threat, they’re much more willing to accept undemocrat­ic moves by their side — because they want their guy to stay in power,” political scientist Jennifer McCoy, who studies authoritar­ian regimes, told me.

The belief that each party poses an existentia­l threat to the other also makes it more difficult for politician­s to negotiate with each other after elections are over — if only because many of their voters loathe the idea of compromisi­ng with the other side.

In one of his last acts as president, Trump broke one more political norm, perhaps the most basic of all: the principle that a losing candidate accepts the outcome of an election.

Even after Republican-controlled state legislatur­es certified Biden’s victory in swing states such as Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin, he refused to concede.

So, the election resolved only one question: which candidate would be inaugurate­d Jan. 20. All our other divisions — political, geographic­al and racial — remain unhealed.

The next four years will tell us whether 2020 will be remembered as the modern era’s low point in American civility, or whether we have further to fall.

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? AS PROTESTS erupted in L.A. and other cities after the killing of George Floyd, President Trump did not call for calm and unity, but denounced Democratic leaders.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times AS PROTESTS erupted in L.A. and other cities after the killing of George Floyd, President Trump did not call for calm and unity, but denounced Democratic leaders.
 ?? Nathan Howard Getty Images ?? WHEN PROTESTS against racism and police brutality persisted well into the summer in Portland, Ore., the Trump administra­tion sent in federal officers. Nightly clashes ensued.
Nathan Howard Getty Images WHEN PROTESTS against racism and police brutality persisted well into the summer in Portland, Ore., the Trump administra­tion sent in federal officers. Nightly clashes ensued.
 ?? Patrick Semansky Associated Press ?? DEMONSTRAT­ORS rallying for racial justice were forcefully cleared from an area near the White House before President Trump staged this photo-op in front of a church June 1.
Patrick Semansky Associated Press DEMONSTRAT­ORS rallying for racial justice were forcefully cleared from an area near the White House before President Trump staged this photo-op in front of a church June 1.
 ?? Mike Desmond WBFO ?? A POLICE OFFICER in Buffalo, N.Y., shoves Martin Gugino, 75, who was protesting racial inequality. Gugino fell to the ground and was seriously injured.
Mike Desmond WBFO A POLICE OFFICER in Buffalo, N.Y., shoves Martin Gugino, 75, who was protesting racial inequality. Gugino fell to the ground and was seriously injured.
 ?? Jason Armond Los Angeles Times ?? SHORTLY AFTER curfew in Minneapoli­s on May 30, a protester gets help rinsing her eyes after being pepper-sprayed by law enforcemen­t officers.
Jason Armond Los Angeles Times SHORTLY AFTER curfew in Minneapoli­s on May 30, a protester gets help rinsing her eyes after being pepper-sprayed by law enforcemen­t officers.

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