Miami Herald

Disabuse Trump of his deceptive and dangerous demand for election-night results

- BY MICHAEL MCGOUGH Los Angeles Times Michael McGough is the Los Angeles Times’ senior editorial writer, based in Washington, D.C.

Call it the trial balloon that launched a thousand punctures. Thursday morning, President Trump tweeted: “With Universal Mail-In Voting (not Absentee Voting, which is good), 2020 will be the most INACCURATE & FRAUDULENT Election in history. It will be a great embarrassm­ent to the USA. Delay the Election until people can properly, securely and safely vote???”

The suggestion that the Nov. 3 election could be delayed was immediatel­y condemned, and Trump was treated to several remedial lessons about who is responsibl­e for fixing the date of the election. (It’s not the president.)

But there was another Trump tweet on Thursday that caught my attention, one that signaled how he might seek to discredit the results of an election he can’t postpone.

”Must know Election results on the night of the Election, not days, months, or even years later!” Trump tweeted Thursday afternoon.

In a similar vein, Trump said this at a White House briefing: “You know, so many years, I’ve been watching elections. And they say the ‘projected winner’ or the ‘winner of the election’ — I don’t want to see that take place in a week after Nov. 3 or a month or, frankly, with litigation and everything else that can happen, years. Years. Or you never even know who won the election.”

Trump is probably exaggerati­ng the likelihood of a long period of suspense before results are clear. Edward Foley, an electionla­w specialist at Ohio State

University’s law school, told the Hill that, while a large number of mail-in ballots might result in some delay, the process should not take longer than a month.

If you were charitable, you could dismiss Trump’s insistence on same-day results as the cranky impatience of a television addict. But it has a moresinist­er interpreta­tion: that delayed results are an indication that something fishy is going on, maybe even the manufactur­ing of votes. So Trump’s comments about delayed results must be read in the context of his fear-mongering about inaccuraci­es and fraud connected to the expanded voting by mail that the coronaviru­s necessitat­es.

There is nothing legislator­s or election officials can do to prevent Trump from sowing suspicion about election results, especially if he loses. But his misinforma­tion campaign could be less successful if Congress and the states took steps to reduce the delay in counting absentee and other ballots. For example, California Gov. Gavin Newsom has signed legislatio­n allowing county election officials to start processing mail-in ballots 29 days before the election.

But it’s also important that election officials — including Republican secretarie­s of state — counter Trump’s insinuatio­ns by reminding voters that there is nothing sinister about a tabulation that lasts beyond election night, especially in an election in which the coronaviru­s pandemic has necessitat­ed increased voting by mail.

The news media can also play a constructi­ve role, by recognizin­g that a rush to declare a winner — problemati­c even in normal election years — is especially ill-advised this year. Trump isn’t the only television viewer who has come to expect the immediate gratificat­ion of an election night result. Indulging that expectatio­n is irresponsi­ble — and plays into Trump’s hands. (c) 2020 Los Angeles

Times

 ?? JIM WATSON Getty Images ?? President Trump hints that any delay in getting Election Night results means something fishy is going on.
JIM WATSON Getty Images President Trump hints that any delay in getting Election Night results means something fishy is going on.
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