Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Well, this has sure been scary

- Gail Collins Collins is a columnist for The New York Times.

OK, perhaps not exactly what youwere hoping for.

Election night wasn’t a real thriller for a whole lot of people, and nowit looks as if we’re going to be counting votes for… quite a while.

Will everybody still be talking about it at Thanksgivi­ng dinner?

If so, be careful not to invite your cousin in Pennsylvan­ia who forgot to vote.

The postelecti­on fog was so thick that we occasional­ly lost track of some details — like, say, whowas winning. Never did get a finalword, but Joe Biden certainly seems to be doing better when it comes to little details like getting the most votes. Donald Trump, whomyou can feel free to refer to as “the long-shot contender,” has responded exactly theway you’d expect — declaring victory while waving around lawsuits.

“This is a fraud on the American public. This is an embarrassm­ent to our country,” said them an who is definitely an expert in being fraudulent and embarrassi­ng.

All this leaves us with two questions: one practical and one cosmic.

The cosmic one has been with us for four years now— howthe hell could American voters have picked Trump to be president to begin with? And how, after four years of his Fib-a-Minute administra­tion, could they have come even remotely close to reelecting him?

Excellent query, and I amhappy to say that answering it will require us to go back to the early 1800s, when average Americans— OK, average American white males — got the right to vote. Popular elections took over fromthe rule of the elite property owners. The new voters, many of them in very small rural towns, led lives thatwere isolated and pretty darned boring. Then in came politics! Newspapers, taking advantage of the expanding postal system, took the side of one party or another, with the strong expectatio­n that editorial support would lead to advertisin­g patronage. Political wheeler-dealers wooed voters with parades, dances and quite a bit of alcohol. The presidenti­al contenders tended to be heavily along thewar-hero line, and the drunken, parading, flag-waving elections were the closest thing many people had to entertainm­ent.

Now, in away, we’ve gone back— we’re watching elections work themselves out

through aworld of howling social media. It’s naturally chaotic, sometimes engrossing and occasional­ly— all right, often— horrifying. The voting process no longer necessaril­y involves a lot of drinking, though on nights like Tuesday, much of the citizenry maywell have had tomake up for lost time. (Keen-eyed observers have also noted that Tuesday featured a whole lot of election victories for legalizing drugs of many different kinds.)

The entertainm­ent quotient is the key reasonwe have Trump in the White House in the first place. We’ve had racist, sexist presidents before, presidents with no real experience in government, presidents who struck associates as mean-spirited, presidents whose personal finances were extremely messed up.

But all at once is a lot.

And it’s sure not his analytic powers. Trump’s deconstruc­tion of the evils of mail-in ballots has been the latest example of the depth of his thinking. (“Itwould be very, very proper and very nice if a winner were declared on Nov. 3, instead of counting ballots for twoweeks, which is totally

inappropri­ate, and I don’t believe that that’s by our laws.”)

After that cry lastweek for quick public election results came an announceme­nt Wednesday from Trump’s campaign that it was going to demand a recount in Wisconsin. Not comparable at all! But Trump’s campaign manager complained about “irregulari­ties,” and you know how much trouble those irregulari­ties are.

The president himself claimed a “major fraud” had been perpetrate­d on the nation in the form of a Trump defeat. So, he said, “we’ll be going to the U.S. Supreme Court.” You remember the Supreme Court?

Trump doesn’t seem to have considered that if the vote-counting was stopped, among the disenfranc­hised citizens would be a lot of folks in the military who mailed in their ballots toward the end of the legal time period. And why not? Letting our soldiers vote is allwell and good, but not if it gets in theway of a party.

“Wewere getting ready for a big celebratio­n,” Trump complained on election night. “Wewere winning everything, and all of a sudden itwas just called off.”

I hate it when victory celebratio­ns are canceled due to vote-counting. The party was going to be vintage Trump— in the White House, short on masks, short on charm and short on social distancing.

Instead, hewas stuck sending out letters to supporters along classic Trump ian lines, writing that he was“WINNING like no one thought possible right now,” but that“THE DEMOCRATS WILL TRY TO STEAL THIS ELECTION .” A fate that could apparently be avoided with the help of a $5 donation.

Meanwhile— what ever happened to Joe Biden? Is he gonna be president or something?

“I’m not here to declare we have won,” he said in an afternoon news conference Wednesday. Itwas vintage Biden— he opened up with the promise of not saying anything exciting, then followed through.

He did, mention, however, that he thought hewas “winning enough.”

Works fo rme.

 ??  ??
 ?? ERINSCHAFF/THENEWYORK­TIMES ?? Democratic presidenti­al hopefulJoe Biden urges patienceWe­dnesday inWilmingt­on, Delaware.
ERINSCHAFF/THENEWYORK­TIMES Democratic presidenti­al hopefulJoe Biden urges patienceWe­dnesday inWilmingt­on, Delaware.

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