Gulf Today

Donald Trump will not accept defeat if he loses poll

- Lawrence Douglas,

Should President Donald Trump lose in the 2020 election, don’t expect him to concede defeat — it is simply not in his DNA to do so. Consider the 2016 race, when then-candidate Trump lost the Iowa caucus to Texas Sen. Ted Cruz. While other losing candidates just moved on, Trump demanded that Cruz’s victory be nullified, tweeting the next morning, “Ted Cruz didn’t win Iowa, he stole it.” And when Colorado gave its convention votes to Cruz ater nonbinding caucuses heavily favored the Texas senator, Trump tweeted, “How is it possible that the people of the great State of Colorado never got to vote in the Republican Primary? Great anger — totally unfair!”

For Trump, a personal defeat is always the result of fraud. Why would we expect him to react differentl­y in the event of a Biden victory? He has already telegraphe­d his intentions, predicting that the 2020 vote will be the most corrupt in our history. In his election script, the only way for our electoral system to demonstrat­e its trustworth­iness would be for him to win; a loss would simply confirm that the election was rigged.

Still, if Trump were to lose decisively, he would have no choice but to submit to defeat. In contrast to conceding, submiting to defeat is simply a losing candidate’s de facto recognitio­n that further fight is futile. In submiting without conceding, Trump could certainly make mischief. He could, for example, encourage his supporters to take to the streets, triggering counterpro­tests met with ugly displays of federal force. But losing big would make it difficult for Trump to engage in more aggressive acts of constituti­onal defiance, such as trying to enlist Republican state legislatur­es to certify him as the winner in their states. So, what would constitute a decisive loss for Trump? Given our peculiar system of electing a president, handing him a big loss in the popular vote guarantees nothing. Even beating Trump convincing­ly in the Electoral College might not be enough. He has made clear that what will mater to him is how the vote count looks on Election Day.

“Must know election results on the night of the Election, not days, months, or even years later!” the president tweeted on July 30, just hours ater he floated the idea of delaying the vote.

In the storm of coverage that surrounded the scandalous idea of an election delay, this tweet passed largely unnoticed. Yet it offers a disturbing glimpse into how Trump’s atacks on mail-in voting might presage an act of electoral defiance.

We know that in the 2020 election an unpreceden­ted number of citizens will vote by mail, particular­ly in urban areas where the health risks associated with in-person voting are likely to be high. We also know that it will take days — or even weeks — for states to complete their full canvass of the mail-ins. And however long these state counts take, they will inevitably shit votes toward Biden and down-ballot Democrats, since urban voters vote overwhelmi­ngly blue.

Trump knows this too. All Republican­s recall the fate of Martha Mcsally, the GOP candidate for US senator in Arizona in 2018. On Election Day, Mcsally enjoyed a 15,000-vote lead over Democratic rival Kyrsten Sinema. By the time Arizona finished its tally of mail-in and provisiona­l ballots, Mcsally had lost to Sinema by 56,000 votes. That is why Trump’s tweet from July 30 should set off alarms. It suggests that if Trump has a tentative lead on Nov. 3, he will consider that tantamount to victory. Further, it suggests he would seek to discount any “blue shit” occurring in subsequent days or weeks as the product of fraud. To bolster his case, he will trot out the rhetoric he has been using lately: that mail-in votes cannot be trusted — and, more to the point, shouldn’t be counted.

 ??  ?? Ted Cruz
Ted Cruz
 ??  ?? Martha Mcsally
Martha Mcsally

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