New York Post

Election not tainted

- Ramesh Ponnuru, Bloomberg View

Let’s assume that Russia tried to swing the election to Donald Trump. Newspaper reports say that intelligen­ce officials have reached that conclusion.

Did Russia’s efforts succeed? It is certainly true, as many conservati­ves have noted, that Hillary Clinton could still have won the election if she had made different decisions, such as showing up in Wisconsin, refraining from setting up her own e-mail server, and so on.

But it seems likely that if everything about the election had been the same except for Russian interferen­ce, Clinton’s lackluster campaign would have nar- rowly won those states.

But does Russian involvemen­t mean “this was a tainted election,” as Paul Krugman of The New York Times charges? I think there are good reasons for voters, including voters who did not support Trump, to reject Krugman’s view.

The form that Russian interferen­ce took is foremost among them. It didn’t hack voting machines so that citizen preference­s would be miscounted. It didn’t primarily even inject misinforma­tion into the public debate. What it mainly seems to have done is put accurate but wrongfully obtained informatio­n

into circulatio­n: informatio­n about what various Clinton aides and Democratic National Committee officials were thinking during the primaries.

Voters were free to consider this informatio­n, or not, and to take account of its illicit origins. At the time, they had good reason to know that Russia had a hand in its disseminat­ion. Russian hacking came up in two of the presidenti­al debates (even though Trump now bizarrely insists it didn’t). Clinton said the hacking was being done for Trump’s benefit. The main thing we have learned since the election, assuming the reporting holds up, is that US intelligen­ce officials agreed with her about the motive.

Russia’s interferen­ce ought to be in- vestigated — as should UScyber-security practices, and President Obama’s dithering in response to the interferen­ce. Americans should be able to agree on the need for further investigat­ion regardless of their sympathies in this election.

Clinton’s supporters can’t be faulted for regretting the choices that an electoral majority of their fellow citizens made. But the voters had access to the informatio­n they needed to put the leaks about the Democrats in context. Their choice was made freely, their choices were tabulated accurately and the result is being decided in the standard way. Like it or not, Trump was elected legitimate­ly.

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