Chattanooga Times Free Press

AMERICA DESERVES BETTER THAN DONALD TRUMP

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Donald Trump, twice impeached for seeking to undermine the integrity of the 2020 presidenti­al election, says he is running for president again in 2024.

His new campaign has begun with the same ugliness, lies and chaos as the last, but it poses even greater dangers to American democracy.

Trump and his supporters can no longer pretend to be good-faith participan­ts in the democratic process. They have enshrined the refusal to accept adverse election results as a defining feature of their political movement, sought to install true believers in local and state election offices and demonstrat­ed a willingnes­s to resort to violence.

Trump is unfit for public office. As president, he showed himself to be incompeten­t and self-dealing. He should have been convicted by the Senate in 2019 for abusing his power and in 2021 for inciting an insurrecti­on. Voters repudiated him at the ballot box after his second campaign, but he has the legal right to try again, so Americans must weather the trial of a third candidacy. If he is still in the race when the first votes are cast in 2024, the election will once again be a referendum on American democracy, because if our system of government is to survive, voters must choose leaders who accept and submit to the rule of law.

Congress needs to pass a bill overhaulin­g the Electoral Count Act before the end of the year to make it harder for congressio­nal supporters of Trump, or any other presidenti­al candidate, to challenge the election results that are submitted by the states. The legislatio­n also includes other safeguards. For example, it would steer disputes over vote tallies to the courts, giving the final say to judges and not partisan officials.

American voters last week rejected every one of the most dangerous election deniers running for key state offices in battlegrou­nd states — from Mark Finchem and Jim Marchant to Tudor Dixon and Kari Lake. Still, there is a real danger of meddling by state and local election officials and members of Congress who deny that Trump lost the 2020 election.

Legal proceeding­s against Trump and investigat­ions related to his actions around Jan. 6, election interferen­ce in Georgia and his mishandlin­g of classified informatio­n at his home in Florida also need to continue.

Trump has many loyal supporters, who regard him as a flawed but effective champion. His rise to power was built on the idea that he is a winner and, for many Republican­s, his victory in 2016 was sufficient justificat­ion for having supported him. It allowed the party to cut taxes and take firm control of the Supreme Court, opening an era of conservati­ve jurisprude­nce, including the reversal of Roe v. Wade this year.

But Republican­s, even those who share Trump’s views on issues like China, trade and immigratio­n, should recognize that it is shortsight­ed to pursue such goals by underminin­g the integrity of the political process. If Americans doubt the legitimacy of elections and their leaders fuel and inflame those doubts, they will no longer accept the legitimacy of decisions or policies of the federal government that contradict their views. Without that fundamenta­l principle of democratic governance, American democracy crumbles.

Trump’s candidacy should serve as a clarion call to those who are willing to fight for the soul of the Republican Party.

While this board does not support many of their policy positions, some leading figures in the party — including former Vice President Mike Pence, Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming, Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley, Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina and Gov. Chris Sununu of New Hampshire, among others — have demonstrat­ed a commitment to the rule of law and an ability to govern.

The country and the Republican Party need a robust nomination fight in which Trump’s record is scrutinize­d and held to account by other Republican­s, and where alternativ­e visions of the country and the party are presented and debated.

The case against Trump is straightfo­rward. He uses demagoguer­y to stoke racism. He lies about matters great and small. As president, he frequently placed his personal interests above the national interest. He promised to lift up ordinary Americans and instead delivered tax cuts for the wealthy that significan­tly increased the federal debt. He was a friend to dictators and an inconstant ally to liberal democracie­s. He made the country’s military position in the world demonstrab­ly weaker by foolishly withdrawin­g from the Iran nuclear deal, which even a senior Israeli official now concedes was a serious self-inflicted wound. And in perhaps his greatest test as president, he treated the COVID-19 pandemic as a public relations problem, downplayin­g the danger and resisting basic safety measures that would have saved lives.

If he is elected, a second Trump term would lack whatever guardrails were in place during the first. Over the course of those four years, Trump grew bolder in his defiance of the other branches of government, disregard for the law and flagrant abuses of presidenti­al power. This time, he would be running with the support of those who are not only aware of his worst abuses but have also embraced him as the wronged party. A second term promises to be a revenge tour of grievances and political payback.

The Democratic Party has an obligation to do more than simply point to those possibilit­ies. Democrats must take seriously the challenge of offering to Americans an appealing alternativ­e. The ultimate justificat­ion for democracy and upholding the rule of law is that it is the system of government that provides the best life for the most people. Democrats argue, correctly, that voting against Trump and his allies is the principled course. They must also show voters that democracy is worth defending, and that it will improve their lives and the lives of their children.

Trump gravely damaged American democracy, but there are promising signs that the wounds are beginning to heal. Nearly without exception, the losing candidates in the recent midterm elections have conceded with grace — even some of those who had attacked the integrity of the election system during their campaigns. The return of Trump’s dark circus threatens that progress. He will once again tempt Americans with misinforma­tion and outright lies, veiled threats and outright calls for violence, insults and provocatio­ns. By rejecting his bid for a political revival, Americans can put Trump in the past, and get back to the hard but necessary work of self-government.

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