Miami Herald (Sunday)

Midterm elections will leave us even more divided — the ‘Disunited States of America

- BY ANDRES OPPENHEIME­R aoppenheim­er@miamiheral­d.com

If Republican­s win the Nov. 8 midterm elections by a wide margin, as several polls are forecastin­g, the U.S. Congress will be virtually controlled by legislator­s who have not accepted the results of the 2020 elections, including many who have supported the violent takeover of the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

A Congress controlled by election skeptics and coup-mongers — people who are not willing to accept their rivals’ victory — may turn an already politicall­y divided country into an even more polarized one.

Worse, it may lead to greater political violence, prompting more incidents like the recent attack on the 82-year-old husband of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi by a right-wing extremist. We may soon become known as the Disunited States of America.

According to a Washington Post investigat­ion, 51% of Republican candidates running for Congress, governorsh­ips and attorney general positions in Tuesday’s elections have either challenged or questioned President Biden’s victory in 2020. Many of those candidates are likely to be elected, and will be in charge of certifying the votes in the 2024 presidenti­al elections.

A similar study by the New York Times found that 70% of Republican­s running for Congress on Nov. 8 have echoed former President Trump’ s false claims that Biden’s election was rigged.

For the record, virtually all of Trump’s lies about the 2020 elections have been proven wrong by numerous vote recounts.

In addition to the Electoral College, the conservati­ve-majority U.S. Supreme Court, more than 60 lower courts, Trump’s then-Vice President Mike Pence and former Trump Attorney General William Barr looked into Trump’s fraud claims and concluded that Biden was legitimate­ly elected in 2020.

Biden won the Electoral College by 306 electoral votes to Trump’s 232 and the popular vote by 7.5 million votes. By comparison, Trump had won the Electoral College in 2016, but lost the popular vote by 3 million votes.

Even the conservati­ve Wall Street Journal’s editorial page, after supporting Trump during his term, concluded after the 2020 elections that the former president’s fraud claims were rubbish. The newspaper said that isolated disputes over mailed ballots did “not add up to a stolen election.” It added that even if Biden’s victory had been overturned in one of the contested states’ vote recounts, Biden would have won in the Electoral College by a comfortabl­e margin.

And yet, despite all of this, Americans are likely to elect many Republican­s who reject the basic foundation of democracy: the sanctity of the vote.

Historical­ly, the opposition party tends to win

U.S. midterm elections. And polls suggest that the same will happen on Tuesday, with Republican­s almost sure to retake the House of Representa­tives and, perhaps, also the Senate.

Many voters are more concerned about inflation than about the future of democracy.

Although 71% of Americans say they are worried about the future of democracy, only 7% say this is the most important issue facing the country, a recent New York Times -Siena poll shows.

But the Republican Party has been successful in pushing the narrative that the high U.S. inflation rate is all of Biden’s fault and not an internatio­nal problem mainly caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

In fact, America remains one of the world’s strongest economies. The country’s 8.1 annual inflation rate is below Germany’s 10.2%, or Great Britain’s 11.3%, according to Internatio­nal Monetary Fund data.

And Biden has done a good job countering Russia’s invasion, which is the biggest current threat to world peace. Biden managed to revamp U.S. ties with the European Union, which Trump had crippled when he threatened to withdraw from the NATO military alliance, and added Japan and other Asian countries to the trans-Atlantic bloc that is helping defend Ukraine.

Still, I’m pretty pessimisti­c about the future of America’s democracy. I’m afraid that despite the fact that many moderate Republican­s don’t believe Trump’s election lies and are true believers in the rule of law, they will cast their votes based on other issues, and will elect a new generation of extremists who are not ready to play by the rules of democracy.

We are heading toward a more divided, and probably more violence-ridden country.

Don’t miss the “Oppenheime­r Presenta” TV show at 7 p.m. Sundays on CNN en Español. Twitter: @oppenheime­ra

 ?? JOSE LUIS MAGANA AP Photo ?? Rioters scale a wall at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington.
JOSE LUIS MAGANA AP Photo Rioters scale a wall at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington.
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