The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

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- Steven Roberts Steven Roberts teaches politics and journalism at George Washington University. He can be contacted by email at stevecokie@ gmail. com.

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America has dodged a bullet. A real live round, not a dud or a dummy. We can still feel the sting, and smell the stink, of that projectile as it whizzed past us and barely missed its target. But next time we might not be so fortunate.

Let’s be clear and candid about this: In effect, President Trump tried, and failed, to stage a coup. He tried, and failed, to reverse the result of an election his own government agency called “the most secure in America history.” And then he fired the head of the office that dared to tell him the truth.

Asrep. James Clyburn, the No. 3 Democrat in the House, told CNN, “They’re really trying to invite insurrecti­on.” And as Thewashing­ton Post put it in an editorial: “Mr. Trump has progressed from lying about the result to adopting the tactics of a tinpot authoritar­ian, trying to overturn a free and fair election by pressuring and corrupting voting officials.”

Trump’s coup attempt failed because his case was ridiculous­ly weak, and the results were not particular­ly close; he lost the popular vote by 7 million ballots, and only got 232 Electoral College votes to Joe Biden’s 306. In addition, he failed because a small cadre of dedicated public servants, many of them Republican­s, rejected his propaganda and resisted his pleas.

A good example was Justice Brianhaged­orn of thewiscons­in Supreme Court, a staunch conservati­ve who once served as legal counsel to the state’s former Republican governor Scott Walker. The justice threw out one of Trump’s legal challenges — Joe Biden won the state by more than 20,000 votes — by saying, “The relief being sought by the petitioner­s is the most dramatic invocation of judicial power I have ever seen. Judicial acquiescen­ce to such entreaties built on so flimsy a foundation would do indelible damage to every future election. ... This is a dangerous pathwe are being asked to tread.”

After the election, Trump asked for recounts in key states. Fair enough — that was his right, even though Biden actually gained 87 votes after the new canvass in Wisconsin. Then the president challenged the results through court suits. OK — that was also his right, even though judges like Hagedorn were increasing­ly hostile to his increasing­ly frivolous petitions.

But then Trump crossed a line: He went from legitimate challenges to illegitima­te coercion; from pursuing legal methods to encouragin­g extra- legal measures. Twice, he called the speaker of the Pennsylvan­ia legislatur­e, exhorting him to ignore thewill of his state’s voters. He summoned the legislativ­e leaders frommichig­an to thewhiteho­use to send the same message. And he has publicly berated Gov. Brian Kemp of Georgia and other Republican state officials for not canceling an election he lost by about 12,000 votes.

“Your governor could stop it very easily if he knewwhat the hell he was doing,” Trump said at a rally in the Georgia city of Valdosta. “So far, we haven’t been able to find the people in Georgia willing to do the right thing.”

If you think words like “coup” or “insurrecti­on” are too strong, look at what happened to Jocelyn Benson, Michigan’s secretary of state, who found her house surrounded by protestors, some brandishin­g weapons. Or the election workers in Georgia who have received death threats.

“Someone’s going to get hurt. Someone’s going to get shot. Someone’s going to get killed,” warned Gabriel Sterling, a Republican who runs Georgia’s election system. “It has all. Gone. Too. Far. It has to stop.”

But it hasn’t stopped. Trump continues to insist, against all evidence, that the electionwa­s “rigged” against him, and while no one has gotten personally assaulted — yet — for opposing him, the violence he’s doing to the political system is already severe. He’s already created a roadmap, a precedent, for a future coup that might well have a better chance of succeeding.

Imagine an election that is a lot closer. Imagine a legal team that is a lot smarter. Imagine state officials and federal judges who are a lot lesswillin­g to defy a deranged president.

“Next time could beworse,” Edward B. Foley, a constituti­onal law expert at Ohio State, warned in Thewashing­ton Post. “But what makes this year’s narrow escape so unnerving is how far the plot to overthrow the election got with so little factual ammunition.”

The coup failed; the insurrecti­on sputtered; the system survived. But Trump’s lasting legacy is not that he made America great again. Exactly the opposite. It’s that he’s doing “indelible damage” to our democracy.

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