Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Trump’s abuse of public trust is wounding democracy

- Clarence Page Clarence Page, a member of the Tribune Editorial Board, blogs atwww.chicago tribune.com/pagespage. cpage@chicagotri­bune.com Twitter @cptime

Howdelusio­nal canwe Americans be? Hardly anything brings out the loony like a heated election, especially when our nation’s tweeter-in-chief stokes the fires with misinforma­tion from the WhiteHouse.

As President Donald Trump tweets unsupporte­d claims of widespread “voter fraud” to justify his stubborn rebuffs of presumptiv­e President-elect Joe Biden’s transition team, a poll of voters before and after the election shows response to his claims falls right where it’s been through the campaign — along a stark partisan divide.

An eye-popping 70% of Republican­s don’t believe the 2020 election was free or fair, according to a poll by Politico andMorning Consult, compared with only 35% who felt thatway before ElectionDa­y.

Meanwhile some 90% of the opposite party, which has been dancing in the streets with joy over Biden’s victory, felt quite the opposite about the election’s fairness, up fromonly 52% who expressed such expectatio­ns before.

I knowpollin­g has taken quite a beating froma frustrated public. But, as those problems are being addressed, public surveys are still useful in revealing broad trends such as rise of public suspicions and the collapse of public trust.

Signs of trust in elections rising and falling according to whose side wins should be no big surprise. But a bigger problem comes when, for example, a president leads his (or someday her) supporters to fan understand­able disappoint­ment into full-blown conspiracy theories.

Yes, I’m thinking of Trump holding up the transition process— including necessary briefings for Biden’s incoming national security and pandemicfi­ghting teams— as a virtual hostage while filing lawsuits and lobbing tweets of doubt.

Voter fraud is not a plaything. Having learned quite a bit about the topic as a young Chicago Tribune reporter, in a town that made the phrase “vote early and often” legendary, I take the charge very seriously.

And as an African American, mindful of howphony voter fraud charges have been used at various times since Reconstruc­tion to suppress the Black vote, I take such shenanigan­s even more seriously.

So I don’t disagree with those who say the president, regardless of party, has a right to have such suspected skuldugger­y fully investigat­ed. But that right should not be abused because public trust can be damaged and even more suspicions raised.

Without trust, our representa­tive democracy falls apart, opening all of us up to the dangers of corruption and autocracy.

Unfortunat­ely, even as confirmed election fraud has declined, public trust has been severely undermined amid demagoguer­y, cynicism and actual political scandals in recent decades. The current president’s stubbornne­ss doesn’t help.

Trump iswaging his own little propaganda­war by Twitter, even as one after another of his campaign’s lawsuits is rebuffed as groundless by the courts. In his quest to find support for his allegation­s, Trump has turned our judicial system on its head.

A notable examplewas the baseless whopper he tweeted this pastweek, quoting an allegation of tampering by a voting machine manufactur­ing company that supposedly “deleted 2.7 million Trump votes nationwide.”

That fiction, which scored a “pantson-fire” rating fromPoliti­Fact as “inaccurate and ridiculous,” was serious enough in its impact to be denounced Thursday by experts in a unit of the Department ofHomeland Security, which also declared that the 2020 presidenti­al electionwa­s “the most secure” in history.

“There is no evidence that any voting system deleted or lost votes, changed votes, orwas in anyway compromise­d,” the DHS‘ Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency said in a strong rebuke of Trump’s tweeted claims.

But what’s a statement from government experts at a timewhen the president’s paranoid allegation­s of “deep state” conspiraci­es routinely undermine the credibilit­y of those government experts who dare to reveal truths inconvenie­nt to Trump?

That leaves the nation— and the world— in the familiar position of wondering when, where or if other Republican leaders will call for an end to his excesses. For now, SenateMajo­rity Leader MitchMcCon­nell and others in his partywould rather have Trump in their tent. They hope he will help the GOP win two runoff Senate elections in Georgia, which voted in a very close race for Biden.

McConnell is not wrong to say the president has a right to have his vote fraud charges investigat­ed, even if the charges are just another con from an expert at the game. But the rest of us also have a right to a peaceful and orderly transfer of power in and out of our WhiteHouse, regardless of who its current tenant happens to be.

 ?? JOHN LOCHER/AP ?? President Donald Trump supporters protest in front of the Clark County Election Department after the Nov. 3 elections, Nov. 6, 2020, in North Las Vegas, Nevada.
JOHN LOCHER/AP President Donald Trump supporters protest in front of the Clark County Election Department after the Nov. 3 elections, Nov. 6, 2020, in North Las Vegas, Nevada.
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