Chattanooga Times Free Press

DEMOCRACY ONLY SERVED WHEN DEMS GET WHAT THEY WANT

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Democrats are using ever-more apocalypti­c language to characteri­ze Republican voting laws that include provisions such as voter ID and limits on mail-in voting.

The vice president has declared voting rights to be “the fight of our nation’s lifetime.” After referring to Georgia’s recently enacted law as “Jim Crow on steroids,” her boss has now taken it a step further by claiming such laws present “the most significan­t test of our democracy since the Civil War.”

We are thus presented with another lesson on how the contempora­ry left advances its agenda through hysteria and fear. And also with the peculiar argument that American democracy is so endangered that the only way to save it is to enact a range of ballot procedures (those contained in the misnamed “For the People Act,” House Resolution 1) that American democracy has never featured before, or to anywhere near such an extent.

Put differentl­y, if the procedures specified in HR1 are what is required to hold a truly democratic election, as Democrats’ rhetoric suggests, then America has never held one.

There is also implicit in Democratic claims ignorance of the fact that voting in America has gotten progressiv­ely easier over time and is now much more so than when Democrats like Bill Clinton and Barack Obama managed, despite all of the suggested obstacles to Democratic turnout, to easily win four presidenti­al elections between them. And that this would still be true if every state had voting laws similar to Georgia’s.

At the least, it seems bizarre to argue that American democracy will be reduced to an empty exercise unless we dilute voter ID requiremen­ts, permit ballot harvesting, require curbside voting, expand use of drop boxes and mail-in voting and feature more days of early voting. And that failure to put all that in place nationwide by federal legislatio­n constitute­s “voter suppressio­n.”

If special rules were establishe­d to enhance voting access during an emergency (the pandemic), what rationale dictates that they remain in place after it, and how will democracy suddenly vanish if they don’t?

Second, there is the even more peculiar tendency to confuse democracy with threats to it; more precisely, to claim that democracy is somehow subverted when voters go to the polls and elect representa­tives to govern on their behalf who then pass laws about voting procedure.

Rather than an assault upon democracy, Georgia’s new voting law is both a consequenc­e and a reflection of it. The people might often be fools, but their capacity to enshrine that foolishnes­s into law is precisely what democracy is all about.

If democracy is defined by the principle of majority rule (the “people’s will,” in more romantic versions), then how is it anti-democratic to codify in law requiremen­ts like voter ID that the vast majority support?

Finally, there is the continuing, seldom-explained belief among Democrats that the survival of democracy always depends upon making voting procedures progressiv­ely looser and voting ever easier as enticement­s.

There is within this a certain amnesiac assumption that whatever voting procedures existed even as recently as a decade ago, and which were assumed at the time to be sufficient­ly democratic, suddenly no longer are.

Closely related is the claim that since little vote fraud is detected, there can be no danger in continuall­y weakening safeguards against it, and that any skepticism thereof can only flow from malicious intent, in this case racism.

To cite a lack of evidence of widespread fraud as a justificat­ion for relaxing safeguards against it is akin to arguing that a city with a low homicide rate can safely repeal its laws against homicide.

When Democrats are in the minority (as in the Texas legislatur­e), the steps they take to thwart the majority are in defense of democracy; when Democrats are in the majority (as in the U.S. Senate), steps taken by the minority to thwart their desires (such as use of the filibuster) constitute a threat to it.

When Democrats get what they want, democracy is served; when they don’t, it has been subverted.

Bradley R. Gitz lives and teaches in Batesville, Ark.

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Bradley R. Gitz

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