Morning Sun

President Trump is trying to cast doubt on an election he might end up losing

- — The Washington Post (Sept. 17)

President Donald Trump tweeted Thursday that the presidenti­al election results “may NEVER BE ACCURATELY DETERMINED” because of the

“new and unpreceden­ted massive amount of unsolicite­d ballots.” “RIGGED ELECTION in waiting,” he exclaimed in another tweet.

This is not the first time Trump has cast doubt on the legitimacy of a vote that polls currently indicate he is likely to lose, and it will not be the last. Rather than internaliz­ing the notion that the coming election is likely to be fraudulent — which experts adamantly insist is not the case — Americans must take every such utterance as more evidence of the president’s underlying goal: to discredit and deny their choice, if they are to eject Trump from the White

House. Typically, it doesn’t pay to be distracted by every outlandish presidenti­al tweet. But Trump’s repeated insistence that he can lose only if there is fraud must be called out for what it is: un-american, antidemocr­atic hogwash.

Trump is spinning his fiction around one fact: Because of the covid-19 pandemic, more people than usual will vote by mail this year. Polls show that Democrats are more likely to do so than Republican­s, so Trump might appear to be ahead in the count on election night in some key states. Then it will probably take days to count absentee ballots. The president will no doubt allege fraud as his lead diminishes or disappears.

He may be abetted by powerful Republican­s who have aided his nefarious effort already. Attorney

General William Barr has repeatedly speculated — without evidence, he admitted — that foreign government­s might print up masses of fraudulent ballots. In an interviewp­ublished in the Chicago Tribune last week, Barr warned of widespread “selling and buying votes.”

“Someone will say the president just won Nevada. ‘Oh, wait a minute! We just discovered 100,000 ballots! Every vote will be counted!’ Yeah, but we don’t know where these freaking votes came from,” Barr said. In the same interview in which he sought to discredit the mail-in balloting that several states use exclusivel­y and have for years without major incident, Barr accused “liberals” of “creating an incendiary situation where there will be loss of confidence in the vote.”

“Our democracy’s enemies, foreign and domestic, want us to concede in advance that our voting systems are faulty or fraudulent,” Dan Coats, Trump’s former director of national intelligen­ce, wrote in a New York Times op-ed published Thursday. “No American, and certainly no American leader, should want such an outcome. Total destructio­n and sowing salt in the earth of American democracy is a catastroph­e well beyond simple defeat and a poison for generation­s,” he wrote. No need to name the leader he had in mind.

Coats then endorsed an idea we proposed previously: “a supremely high-level bipartisan and nonpartisa­n commission to oversee the election” that would monitor voting and vote counting and “confirm for the public that the laws and regulation­s governing them have been scrupulous­ly and expeditiou­sly followed — or that violations have been exposed and dealt with.”

Congress should impanel an election commission. If it does not, senior statesmen should form one on their own. Former presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama would be natural leaders for such a panel. And Americans should understand that there is nothing untoward if many people vote by mail - and if the result of their voting is not confirmed on election night.

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