Los Angeles Times

Trump and his sycophants would burn down democracy

The president as would- be thief in an election he clearly lost

- ROBIN ABCARIAN @AbcarianLA­T

I listened in horror to every word of President Trump’s phone call with Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger.

“What are we gonna do here, folks?” said the president. “I only need 11,000 votes. Fellas, I need 11,000 votes. Gimme a break.”

That was bad enough. Worse, though, was that the call took place on Saturday, two months after Trump was voted out of office. He could have spent the time making sure that COVID- 19 vaccines were rolled out smoothly.

Instead, he ignored his job and has been obsessed with finding ways to steal the election, pardon a parade of his criminal cronies and murderers, tweet a daily f lurry of lies to his base and bestow America’s highest civilian honor on Devin Nunes, a delusional congressma­n who sues fictional cows.

Dozens of lawsuits challengin­g the election results have been filed by sore Republican losers — and rapidly tossed out by the courts. Every state has certified its results. The electoral college has voted, awarding Joe Biden 306 electoral votes — 36 votes more than the 270 required to win.

But the Georgia phone call tape makes one unsavory fact clear: No matter what the voters have said, Trump still believes he can cheat and bully his way into a second term.

“I won this election by hundreds of thousands of votes,” Trump insisted on the call. “There’s no way I lost Georgia. There’s no way. We won by hundreds of thousands of votes.” ( In fact, he lost narrowly in Georgia, by 11,779 votes. The state counted the ballots three times.)

Trump’s habit of running roughshod over the truth has always been pathetic, but now it is downright dangerous.

It was, for example, kind of entertaini­ng when he tweeted in 2016, “Ted Cruz didn’t win Iowa, he stole it…. Ted Cruz should be disqualifi­ed from his fraudulent win in Iowa.”

And it was sad but relatively harmless when Trump insisted his inaugurati­on crowd was the largest in history.

But demanding that his fellow Republican colleagues go along with his effort to overturn the will of the people is neither entertaini­ng nor harmless. It is an attempt at a procedural coup, a way of spitting on one of our most cherished traditions, the peaceful transfer of power between presidents.

As vile as Trump’s machinatio­ns have been, they are almost understand­able in the context of a dangerous narcissist whose ego cannot tolerate the idea that he has become the thing he despises most: a loser. Trump is incapable of putting his country above himself.

But neither, apparently, are the legions of his enablers, looking to take up the Trumpian mantle in 2024. Sycophants like Republican Sens. Ted Cruz of Texas and Josh Hawley of Missouri are planning to challenge Congress’ formal count of electoral college votes today.

Cruz et al are turning what should be a formality into a circus. They say they will demand that a commission be appointed to investigat­e ( entirely unfounded and discredite­d) allegation­s of election fraud in some of the “disputed” states.

“We went into this election with the country deeply divided, deeply polarized,” Cruz said Sunday, “and we’ve seen in the last two months unpreceden­ted allegation­s of voter fraud, and that’s produced a deep, deep distrust of our democratic process across the country. I think we in Congress have an obligation to do something about that.”

This is the moral equivalent of killing your parents, then throwing yourself on the court’s mercy because you are an orphan.

Republican­s like Cruz are the ones who have whipped up the mistrust, prodded by their undemocrat­ic overlord, the president. Republican­s have accused vote counters of cheating. They’ve made up stories about evildoing voting machines. They’ve conjured suitcases of ballots that disappear and reappear.

“I think everyone needs to calm down,” Cruz told Maria Bartiromo of Fox Business on Sunday. “I think we need to tone down the rhetoric. This is already a volatile situation. It’s like a tinderbox and throwing lit matches into it.”

Was he referring to rhetoric from Republican­s like U. S. Rep. Louie Gohmert of Texas, who last week suggested that violence in the streets might be the only way to stop Biden from becoming president? Of course not. He was referring to his Democratic critics who have assailed the pointless stunt he and Hawley have planned for Wednesday.

Republican­s like Trump, Cruz, Hawley and Gohmert are not just the tinderbox. They are also the ones holding the lit matches. They are willing to burn down the house to save their sorry souls.

Republican­s have — and this is their neatest trick — accepted their House and Senate victories on the very same ballots they claim were illegally counted for Biden.

The most obvious explanatio­n is that most American voters can’t stand Trump, but a lot of them liked and voted for down- ballot Republican­s.

One of the few principled Republican­s, Rep. Chip Roy of Texas, has acknowledg­ed this obvious contradict­ion.

In defending his decision to undermine what our country’s experts have called the most secure election of our lifetime, Cruz has claimed that 39% of Americans believe the election was f lawed, if not stolen, and their views must be respected.

I do not believe for one second that Cruz et al are truly concerned about the 39% of Americans who believe the lies Trump has been spewing. They are concerned for their political futures, hoping to inherit his base by emulating his most despicable behavior.

At last count, 61% of Americans believe abortion should be legal, and 60% of Americans believe in stricter gun laws. Where is Cruz’s respect or concern for those Americans?

 ?? Kevin Dietsch Pool Photo ?? SEN. TED CRUZ ( R- Texas) is helping turn what should be a formality into a circus.
Kevin Dietsch Pool Photo SEN. TED CRUZ ( R- Texas) is helping turn what should be a formality into a circus.
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