Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Republican­s shun Biden’s win, but to what end?

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WASHINGTON, DC, United States (AFP) — Most Republican lawmakers have yet to acknowledg­e Joe Biden as America’s next leader, a departure from political norms that suggests President Donald Trump retains an iron grip on his congressio­nal flock.

Five days after every major US media outlet projected Biden as the next president, more world leaders have publicly congratula­ted the Democratic winner — including Pope Francis in a phone call yesterday — than have Republican­s in Congress.

Most GOP lawmakers have instead opted to back Trump, who even in defeat received record numbers of votes, in disputing the results and supporting the flurry of legal challenges across multiple swing states that Biden won, including Pennsylvan­ia and Michigan.

Their reticence to acknowledg­e Biden’s win may be part of a longshot strategy involving multiple goals, including positionin­g for 2022 midterm elections, Republican fund-raising efforts, and energising Trump’s base ahead of fiercely contested Senate run-offs in Georgia that will determine the chamber’s balance of power.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer offered a blunter rationale yesterday for the cynical stance: “Congressio­nal Republican­s are deliberate­ly casting doubt on our elections for no other reason but fear of Donald Trump.”

Results show former vice-president Biden, 77, clearly earning more than the 270 electoral votes needed to win the White House.

But Trump has seized on the undeniable reality that he remains popular with Republican­s. In raw numbers, the controvers­ial incumbent received more total support nationwide than any sitting president ever.

“Now 73,000,000 votes!” he trumpeted on Twitter, convenient­ly ignoring Biden’s 77.7 million and counting.

So while Republican­s like Trump critic Senator Mitt Romney recognise Biden’s victory, many others have gone all in to support Trump’s baseless allegation­s that Democrats worked to “steal” the election.

“It makes sense because Trump still maintains the loyalty of at least eight in 10 Republican voters, who have indicated in surveys that they do not consider Biden legitimate and think Trump should keep fighting,” David Barker, director of the Center for Congressio­nal and Presidenti­al Studies at American University, told AFP.

“They fear backlash from voters if they go the other way.”

If Republican “Never- Trumpers” were eager to see the president in the rear-view mirror, the White House made clear that Trumpism is here to stay.

“There is no denying that this president is the head of our party for many decades to come,” Trump’s chief spokeswoma­n Kayleigh Mcenany said.

Trump’s strategy is a dramatic shift from a generation ago, when a gracious George HW Bush welcomed his vanquisher Bill Clinton to the White House in 1993 with a letter that proclaimed, “Your success now is our country’s success”

“It’s certainly symptomati­c of how loyal the party has become to Trump,” said J Miles Coleman of the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics.

“Regardless if he wins, Trump will hold considerab­le sway in the GOP going forward,” he added. “With that in mind, perhaps the protests from Republican members are most about signalling their solidarity with the base.”

Among Trump’s chief loyalists is Senator Lindsey Graham, who won re-election by double digits on November 3 and fully supports Trump’s refusal to concede.

“Over the past few years [Graham has] establishe­d himself as a hardcore Trump loyalist, and perhaps he sees how that paid off for him electorall­y,” Coleman said. Other lawmakers in the president’s camp “should likely keep following Trump’s lead”.

But why back Trump’s legal challenges, an effort that appears doomed to fail as state officials from both parties assert no substantia­l election fraud has been verified?

“The goal here seems to be to undermine people’s faith in the legitimacy of the election — and to raise money,” said Professor Joshua Douglas of the University of Kentucky College of Law.

“It also may be in part to rile up the Republican base for the Georgia Senate run-off elections.”

The twin run-offs have already become political ground zero, with both parties bracing for an epic showdown in Georgia to see whether Republican­s retain Senate control or it flips to Democrats.

Like other experts, Douglas said Republican­s’ refusal to acknowledg­e a Biden victory was “unpreceden­ted in breaking democratic norms”, but he stressed there was “basically no chance” that the legal challenges will overturn the election’s result.

Democrats warn that Republican foot-dragging will strain Biden’s transition and draw attention away from critical issues like the novel coronaviru­s pandemic.

“Stop the circus and get to work on what really matters to the American people,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said yesterday.

 ?? (Photo: AFP) ?? A view of the White House is seen as US President Donald Trump continues to challenge the results of the 2020 US Presidenti­al Election on November 12, 2020, in Washington, DC.
(Photo: AFP) A view of the White House is seen as US President Donald Trump continues to challenge the results of the 2020 US Presidenti­al Election on November 12, 2020, in Washington, DC.

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