Miami Herald

Trump again refuses to promise to honor the vote

- BY REID J. EPSTEIN, EMILY COCHRANE AND GLENN THRUSH The New York Times

WASHINGTON

President Donald Trump declined for a second straight day to commit to a peaceful transfer of power if he lost the election, repeating baseless assertions that the voting would be a “big scam.”

“We want to make sure that the election is honest, and I’m not sure that it can be,” Trump told reporters on Thursday before leaving the White House for North

Carolina.

The president doubled down on his stance just hours after prominent Republican­s made it clear that they were committed to the orderly transfer of power, without directly rebuking him. “The winner of the November 3rd election will be inaugurate­d on January 20th,” Mitch McConnell, the Senate majority leader, wrote on Twitter early Thursday. “There will be an orderly transition just as there has been every four years since 1792.”

President Donald Trump said he’s not sure the election will be ‘honest.’ Congressio­nal leaders rejected Trump’s assertion that he’ll ‘see what happens’ before accepting an election outcome.

Democrats were far less restrained, comparing Trump’s comments to those of an authoritar­ian leader and warning Americans to take his stance seriously.

“You are not in North Korea; you are not in Turkey; you are not in Russia, President [Trump], and by the way, you are not in Saudi Arabia,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said. “You are in the United States of America. It is a democracy, so why don’t you just try for a moment to honor your oath of office to the Constituti­on of the United States?”

Chris Edelson, an American University professor who has studied the expansion of presidenti­al power during national emergencie­s, said Trump’s comments represente­d a unique threat to a central pillar of democracy. “It’s impossible to underscore how absolutely extraordin­ary this situation is — there are really no precedents in our country,” he said. “This is a president who has threatened to jail his political opponents. Now he is suggesting he would not respect the results of an election. These are serious warning signs.”

Douglas Brinkley, the presidenti­al historian, said, “This may be the most damaging thing he has ever done to American democracy.”

Over the past four years, establishm­ent Republican­s have tried to adjust to Trump’s disruption­s, either ignoring his comments or dismissing them as a temporary news-cycle diversion rather than a threat to the democratic process. Republican­s appeared on Thursday to be trying to reassure the public about the electoral system while withholdin­g personal criticism of the president, a balancing act that shows their political codependen­ce — one that has led GOP lawmakers, with few exceptions, to faithfully execute his wishes.

Trump’s comments follow a series of battlegrou­nd state polls that show him trailing former Vice President Joe Biden, the Democratic challenger. The president’s standing has not recovered since the beginning of the coronaviru­s pandemic, despite his repeated efforts to focus voters’ attention on other issues, from the economy to social unrest to the new Supreme Court vacancy.

Trump initially sparked alarm on Wednesday when, asked about a peaceful transition, he said that “we’re going to have to see what happens” — remarks that intensifie­d the growing partisan controvers­y over the legitimacy of the elections. Trump, as he has many times before, questioned the integrity of the voting system, and he repeated that skepticism Thursday, saying: “We have to be very careful with the ballots. The ballots — you know, that’s a whole big scam.”

There is no evidence that mailing ballots to voters increases fraud in the voting process, though there have been scattered instances of the Postal Service’s failing to deliver ballots among other mail that did not reach its destinatio­n.

At the Capitol on Thursday, Republican senators and members of the House could not avoid questions from reporters about the president’s sentiment, but party members elsewhere exhibited little appetite for engaging in a discussion about them. Just four of the 168 Republican National Committee members responded to emailed questions about Trump’s remarks, and just one of the country’s 26 Republican governors — Asa Hutchinson of Arkansas — agreed to address the issue when contacted through their press offices.

“Our common commitment to democracy and the rule of law,” Hutchinson wrote, “is not dependent upon the actions of any one individual.”

Republican congressio­nal aides scrambled to respond to Trump’s remarks on Wednesday night, settling on an informal strategy that affirmed broad constituti­onal principles and trod lightly around Trump, the most powerful and popular member of their party. They also attempted to throw the question back at Democrats by seizing on Hillary Clinton’s recent remark, which stopped short of Trump’s comment, that Democrats “should not concede the election” until all legal options had been exhausted.

Sen. Susan Collins, RMaine, a moderate facing the most challengin­g reelection fight of her career — in a state that is becoming more favorable to Democrats — was the rare Republican to refer directly to Trump as she questioned his actions.

“I don’t know what his thinking was, but we have always had a peaceful transition between administra­tions,” Collins said. “The peaceful transfer of power is a fundamenta­l tenet of our democracy, and I am confident that we will see it occur once again.”

Sen. Jeff Merkley, DOregon, said his Republican colleagues had an obligation to denounce any suggestion that Trump would not participat­e in a peaceful transfer of power.

“Anyone elected who takes an oath to the Constituti­on has the responsibi­lity to respond and say this is unacceptab­le,” Merkley said in an interview. “This is the way authoritar­ian dictators operate. They have show elections and they say, ‘I win, and I will make sure the results show I win.’ ”

On Wednesday, Trump merged the two story lines involving the Supreme Court vacancy and the legitimacy of the election. He said he expected voting disputes to be decided by the Supreme Court and urged a swift confirmati­on for a successor to Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Two leading Republican senators, Ted Cruz of Texas and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, have echoed the president’s call for a swift action on his nominee, citing the court’s potential role in deciding the outcome.

Former Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin, who has been helping Vice President Mike Pence prepare for the upcoming debates, struck a defiant note, writing on Twitter: “Smart candidates never concede anything before an election. They focus on what it takes to win.”

Sen. Rick Scott of Florida announced that he had introduced legislatio­n that would require every state to count and report its final results “within 24 hours after polls close on Election Day.” The federal government has no role in overseeing elections; they are conducted and certified by local officials, who abide by a variety of rules about how and when ballots must be returned in order to be counted in a presidenti­al election.

Still, the debate exposed a divide in the party that the flurry of GOP statements — and attacks on Democrats — could not obscure, and Trump’s comments caused deep uneasiness among some stalwarts of the besieged Republican establishm­ent.

“This isn’t the typical Trump outrage that comes and goes,” said Brendan Buck, a former top adviser to House Speaker Paul Ryan, who stepped down in 2019. “Senators are stating their principle here because it’s obvious to everyone that he is, in fact, planning to dispute the results if he loses, no matter how lopsided. Calling him names isn’t going to stop him, but they are trying to save themselves some trouble later by making clear they’re not going to flirt with crazy conspiraci­es that make a mockery of our democracy.”

 ?? EVAN VUCCI AP ?? President Trump claimed the voting would be a ‘big scam.’
EVAN VUCCI AP President Trump claimed the voting would be a ‘big scam.’

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