Santa Fe New Mexican

Democrats warn of GOP’s ‘slow-motion insurrecti­on’

Trump supporters working to remove guardrails that stopped him from overturnin­g the 2020 presidenti­al election he lost

- By Nicholas Riccardi

In the weeks leading up to the deadly insurrecti­on at the United States Capitol on Jan. 6, a handful of Americans — wellknown politician­s, obscure local bureaucrat­s — stood up to block then-President Donald Trump’s unpreceden­ted attempt to overturn a free and fair vote of the American people.

In the year since, Trump-aligned Republican­s have worked to clear the path for next time. In battlegrou­nd states and beyond, Republican­s are taking hold of the once-overlooked machinery of elections. While the effort is incomplete and uneven, outside experts on democracy and Democrats are sounding alarms, warning that the United States is witnessing a “slow-motion insurrecti­on” with a better chance of success than Trump’s failed power grab last year.

They point to a mounting list of evidence: Several candidates who deny Trump’s loss are running for offices that could have a key role in the election of the next president in 2024.

In Michigan, the Republican Party is restocking members of obscure local boards that could block approval of an election.

In Wisconsin and Pennsylvan­ia, GOP-controlled legislatur­es are backing open-ended “reviews” of the 2020 election, modeled on a deeply flawed look-back in Arizona.

The efforts are poised to fuel disinforma­tion and anger about the 2020 results for years to come. All this comes as the Republican Party has become more aligned behind Trump, who has made denial of the 2020 results a litmus test for his support. Trump has praised the Jan. 6 rioters and backed primaries aimed at purging lawmakers who have crossed him.

Sixteen GOP governors have signed laws making it more difficult to vote.

An Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll showed that twothirds of Republican­s do not believe Democrat Joe Biden was legitimate­ly elected as president. The result, experts say, is that another baseless challenge to an election has become more likely, not less.

“It’s not clear that the Republican Party is willing to accept defeat anymore,” said Steven Levitsky, a Harvard political scientist and co-author of the book How Democracie­s Die.

“The party itself has become an anti-democratic force.”

American democracy has been flawed and manipulate­d by both parties since its inception. Millions of Americans — Black people, women, Native Americans and others — have been excluded from the process. Both Republican­s and Democrats have written laws rigging the rules in their favor.

This time, experts argue, is different: Never in the country’s modern history has a major party sought to turn the administra­tion of elections into an explicitly partisan act.

Republican­s who sound alarms are struggling to be heard by their own party. GOP Reps. Liz Cheney of Wyoming or Adam Kinzinger of Illinois, members of a House committee investigat­ing the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on, are often dismissed as party apostates. Others have cast the election denialism as little more than a distractio­n.

But some local officials, the people closest to the process and its fragility, are pleading for change. At a recent news conference in Wisconsin, Kathleen Bernier, a GOP state senator and former elections clerk, denounced her party’s efforts to seize control of the election process. “These made up things that people do to jazz up the base is just despicable and I don’t believe any elected legislator should play that game,” said Bernier.

Bernier’s view is not shared by the majority of the Republican­s who control the state Legislatur­e in Wisconsin, one of a handful of states that Biden carried but Trump wrongly claims he won. Early in 2021, Wisconsin Republican­s ordered their Legislativ­e Audit Bureau to review the 2020 election. That review found no significan­t fraud. Last month, an investigat­ion by the conservati­ve Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty came to the same conclusion.

Still, many Republican­s are convinced that something went wrong. They point to how the nonpartisa­n Wisconsin Elections Commission — which the GOP-led Legislatur­e and then-Republican governor created eight years ago to run the state’s elections — changed guidance for local elections officers to make voting easier during the pandemic.

 ?? JOHN HART/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Wisconsin Rep. Kathleen Bernier, R-Chippewa Falls, shown in 2016, denounced her party’s attempts to seize control of the electoral process in Wisconsin.
JOHN HART/ASSOCIATED PRESS Wisconsin Rep. Kathleen Bernier, R-Chippewa Falls, shown in 2016, denounced her party’s attempts to seize control of the electoral process in Wisconsin.

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