San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Trump putting democracy to test after loss to Biden

Long-held tradition of transferri­ng power is under siege amid president’s antics

- By Michael Tackett and CalvinWood­ward

WASHINGTON — Winston Churchill was not known for leaving his thoughts unspoken. One of them was this: “It has been said that democracy is the worst form of government, except for all those other forms that have been tried.”

President Donald Trump, who has professed admiration for, if not deep knowledge of, the British prime minister, is putting Churchill’s observatio­n to one of its greatest tests by refusing to accept the results of an election that delivered victory for Democrat Joe Biden. Trump’s predecesso­r, Barack Obama, calls this a “dangerous path” for the United States.

Trump has forced a dusting off of the arcana of the procedures for the Electoral College, which for almost the entirety of the nation’s history has been a formality and not an instrument to overturn people’s votes.

Asitting American president is, for the first time, trying to convince the people that they should not believe the numbers that clearly demonstrat­e his rival’s win. Rather, Trump is making baseless claims of massive fraud, demanding recounts and calling for audits in an effort to discredit the outcome and, in the process, put democracy itself on trial.

It’s possible that the mercurial president is one tweet away from a change of heart, but so far that is not the case. And the sweeping majority ofhis fellowRepu­blicans are allowing him to play this out.

Obama, who invited Trump to the White House soon after Trump’s election four years ago and pledged cooperatio­n in the transfer of power, is not shocked that a man who “never admits loss” is refusing to acknowledg­e defeat now.

“I’m more troubled by the fact that other Republican officials, who clearly know better, are going along with this, are humoring him in this fashion,” Obama told CBS’ “60Minutes.” “It is onemore step in delegitimi­zing not just the incoming Biden administra­tion but democracy generally. And that’s a dangerous path.”

With one eye on Trump, Republican­s may have the other fixed on Georgia, where they want his energy to help their candidates win two Senate runoffs in January and ensure at minimum that Biden has to deal with divided government. Republican­s have seen howTrump batters dissidents, and few have chosen this consequent­ial moment to cross him.

“Republican­s are sticking with him out of fear,” said Eric Dezenhall, a crisis management expert who worked in communicat­ions in Ronald Reagan’s White House. “Fear has always worked for Trump. Tantrums have always paid dividends.

“Republican­s fear if they don’t stand by him, one midnight tweet will cost them Georgia,” he said. More broadly, “they don’twant to anger him.”

Trump is using not just his sway over the party but also the levers of government to keep Biden at bay at least for a while longer.

An agency little known outside Washington, the General Services Administra­tion, has held off on recognizin­g Biden as the presidentd­enying him access to themoney, offices and machinery routinely afforded to the incoming team. Biden has also been denied the classified briefings that previous presidents shared with presidents-elect so that rising national security threats don’t catch the next administra­tion and the country off guard. Trump installed loyalists at the Pentagon and fired his defense secretary after Biden’s victory.

‘Hungry’ for lies

In the meantime, a contagion of falsehood has been spread fromthe losing side, magnified on social media and given brute force by Trump himself.

In Philadelph­ia, a beleaguere­d city commission­er on the panel responsibl­e for conducting and counting the vote said he’s been stunned by the traction that wild tales of fraud have gained in the state that clinched victory for Biden. The commission­er, Al Schmidt, is a Republican.

“One thing I can’t comprehend is how hungry people are to consume lies,” he told CNN. Asked if he held Trump himself responsibl­e for that, Schmidt said: “People should be mindful that there are bad actors who are lying to them.”

During a break fromeven more pressing electoral business, his team checked allegation­s of dead people voting. “We looked it up,” Schmidt said. “Not a single one of them voted in Philadelph­ia after they died.”

Trump is also making unsupporte­d claims of unfairness in five states, repeating allegation­s even when they’ve been firmly debunked. This as his supporters hail race calls by the media when those calls go their way and denounce calls as illegitima­te when they don’t.

Not everyone in officialdo­m shares the timidity of GOP lawmakersw­hen it comes to standing up to Trump.

The Homeland Security Department’s Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency has slapped down rumor after unfounded rumor about voting malfeasanc­e

and joined with state election officials in a statement declaring the election to have been the “most secure in American history.”

By secure, they meant there was no evidence that any voting system deleted or lost votes, changed votes “or was in any way compromise­d.” That was a clear repudiatio­n of Trump’s unfounded accusation­s.

States have until Dec. 14 to finish the counting and certify the results. That’s also the day Electoral College delegation­s are to meet in their respective states to cast and tally electoral votes, with a joint session of Congress set for Jan. 6 to affirm the count and declare the official result. It’s a process thick with pro-formaminut­ia that Americans rarely need to understand but this time conceivabl­y might.

Transfers of power

TheU.S. has long promoted the conceit that it is the world’s beacon of democracy. Now, the most essential tool of democracy, the vote, is under attack.

The story of presidenti­al elections the night of, the day after or evenweeks of indecision later has been one of candidates swallowing the bitterness of defeat and smoothing the path for the winner. Presidenti­al transition­s have unfolded as if bymuscle memory. The peaceful transfer of power has never been in question in living memory until now.

Perhaps the closest the U.S. has come to today’s conflict was the presidenti­al election of 1876, when Samuel Tilden, the Democrat, appeared to win, only to have Rutherford B. Hayes, the Republican, ultimately declared the winner after cutting a deal to secure electoral votes in three Southern states in exchange for effectivel­y ending Reconstruc­tion.

That election, unlike this one, did not involve an incumbent trying to cling to power. Nor did others that loom large in more recent

history.

In 1960, Democrat John F. Kennedy defeated Republican Richard Nixon by only about 112,000 votes out of more than 68 million cast, though Kennedy held a decided advantage in the Electoral College. Nixon felt cheated and considered challengin­g the outcomebut declined, conceding the morning after the election.

Al Gore, the Democratic nominee in 2000, won the popular vote by about 540,000 votes out of100milli­on cast. But he conceded twice — at first prematurel­y on election night, then again weeks later when a decision by the Supreme Court handed Florida, and an Electoral College majority, 271266, to Republican George W. Bush.

Bush had turned to the high court with a legal case based not on fraud but on his claim that voters were denied equal protection because Florida did not have proper standards for recounts.

In 2016, Trump won Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvan­ia by a combined 77,000 votes; Democrat Hillary Clinton called him on election night and publicly conceded the next day. Her advantage in the popular vote of nearly 3million has animated the grievances of her supporters to this day, but the Electoral College arithmetic was inexorable and not to be challenged.

Obama then welcomed Trump to the White House in a display to the world of the rituals of an American democratic transition.

In 2008, Obama had been the beneficiar­y of similar graciousne­ss. That’s when Republican rival John McCain conceded before a crowd of supporters, converting their boos at the mention of Obama’s name to cheers and applause for the Democrat, for the process and for the historic achievemen­t of the first Black American to win the presidency.

“I wish Godspeed to the man who was my former opponent and will be my president,” McCain said.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? President Barack Obama, who invited Trump to the White House soon after Trump’s election four years ago and pledged cooperatio­n in the transfer of power, is not shocked that a man who “never admits loss” is refusing to acknowledg­e defeat now.
Associated Press file photo President Barack Obama, who invited Trump to the White House soon after Trump’s election four years ago and pledged cooperatio­n in the transfer of power, is not shocked that a man who “never admits loss” is refusing to acknowledg­e defeat now.
 ?? Evan Vucci / Associated Press ?? President Donald Trump’s efforts to discredit the election outcome — which include calling for recounts and audits — are putting democracy itself on trial.
Evan Vucci / Associated Press President Donald Trump’s efforts to discredit the election outcome — which include calling for recounts and audits — are putting democracy itself on trial.

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