New York Post

Payback for Dems’ ‘Resisting’ 2016 Vote

- MICHAEL BARONE

‘MY sense is that if Trump wins, Hillary supporters will be sad,” leftwing writer Sally Kohn tweeted the day of the 2016 election. “If Hillary wins, Trump supporters will be angry. Important difference.” Kohn turned out to be wrong about her own side that year, which angrily set about delegitimi­zing Donald Trump’s victory. She was wrong, too, in her apparent assumption — shared by shop owners who boarded up their windows — that Trump supporters would react as violently to his defeat as the Black Lives Matter movement reacted to a death in Minneapoli­s.

Which is not to say President Trump and many of his supporters are responding gracefully to their candidate’s failure to repeat his 2016 feat of winning the presidency by a margin of 77,736 votes in three crucial states (Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvan­ia). They are not consoled that Joe Biden’s margin of victory in this year’s three crucial states (Arizona, Georgia, Wisconsin) was an even smaller 43,809 votes.

Trump has not discourage­d efforts by his lawyers and others to, somehow, overturn the result. None has come anywhere close to identifyin­g errors that would justify overturnin­g the result in one state, much less the three needed to reverse the result.

This should not be surprising. When one state whose electoral votes are decisive has a very narrow popular-vote margin, the results will be fiercely contested, as Florida’s were in 2000. The final official margin was just 537 votes.

That’s a lot less than 77,736 or 43,809, or the 118,601 by which George W. Bush carried the crucial electoral votes of Ohio in 2004. Overturnin­g earlier narrow electoral-vote majorities would have required successful challenges of popular-vote margins of 18,488 in two states in 1976, of 317,742 votes in seven states in 1968 and of 33,538 votes in four states in 1960. That’s one reason losing candidates didn’t challenge the results.

Another reason is we have — or had — a norm against delegitimi­zing election results. In 1960, Richard Nixon chose to observe that norm and not challenge results in multiple states. In 2000, Al Gore contested the results in Florida but conceded after the final court ruling and segued to issue advocacy.

Not so in 2016. In violation of longstandi­ng norms, Obama administra­tion intel and law-enforcemen­t agencies spied on the opposition party campaign. Officials proffered the dodgy Steele dossier before the FISA court without revealing it was paid for by Hillary Clinton’s campaign.

In violation of longstandi­ng norms, Democrats refused to accept the result as legitimate. “I will not accede to this. I will resist,” tweeted liberal think tank head Neera Tanden (President-elect Joe Biden’s choice to head the Office of Management and Budget) five days after the election. Democrats took to calling themselves “the Resistance,” suggesting the Trump administra­tion was morally equivalent to the proHitler Vichy regime in France.

Again and again, leading Democrats — Hillary Clinton, Rep. Jerrold Nadler, the late Rep. John Lewis, Joe Biden, Jimmy Carter — called Trump an “illegitima­te” president. For three years, Democrats advanced the Russia-collusion hoax without finding or producing any evidence except for the discredite­d Steele dossier.

Joe McCarthy had the limp excuse that at some point, there were some communists in the State Department. Democrats and their many allies in the news media lacked a similar excuse for propagatin­g the Russia-collusion hoax.

So you can find polls that say most Democrats believe Trump is an “illegitima­te” president and that Russians hacked election Web sites and polls that say most Republican­s be

Again and again, leading Democrats ... ’ called Trump an“illegitima­te” president.

lieve Biden stole the election with the connivance of election officials in multiple states.

High-minded commentato­rs who paid relentless and respectful attention to what were obviously absurd and concocted charges of Russian collusion lament this state of affairs. They urge everyone to heed Joe Biden’s call to “unify” the nation.

They have a point. Democrats misbehaved for four years in trying to delegitimi­ze Donald Trump’s 77,736vote victory. Trump and many Republican­s have been misbehavin­g for four weeks in trying to delegitimi­ze Joe Biden’s 43,809-vote victory.

The conservati­ve National Review is right to denounce Trump’s “disgracefu­l endgame.” But its liberal counterpar­ts have done little or nothing to denounce Democrats’ disgracefu­l flouting of longstandi­ng norms. The few left writers — Glenn Greenwald, Matt Taibbi — have taken flak and separated themselves from institutio­nal affiliatio­ns.

Democrats who are dismayed that many Americans aren’t meekly accepting the legitimacy of the Biden presidency are in the process of learning a lesson taught a very long time ago. You reap what you sow.

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