San Antonio Express-News

As hook emerges from the curtains, Trump puts on the show of his life

- By Shannon Bow O’brien Shannon Bow O’brien is an assistant professor of instructio­n in the Department of Government at the University of Texas at Austin.

The presidency of Donald Trump has reached its most critical hour. Trump sees himself as the vaunted protagonis­t against the ropes in a seemingly losing battle against his antagonist. Just as with many of the movies we watch or the stories we read, we want the antagonist to be defeated as the protagonis­t snatches victory from the jaws of defeat. The credits roll and the hero is frozen in a victory pose for all to cheer. That is at least part of the perception Trump wants to create in the eyes of the American public.

Trump sees the world through the eyes of profession­al wrestling, a staged ballet with clear winners and losers. In wrestling, the results are predetermi­ned and the event primarily functions as entertainm­ent for the masses. The battle is about how well you sell yourself to the crowd, not about the truth of the match. Informatio­n that interferes with your narrative is, by default, fake news, regardless of its veracity.

But in reality, it is much more. Trump is engaged in a fight for his political legacy. Success hinges on how effectivel­y he can invalidate the legitimacy of votes for his opponent. The totals matter less than the perception of the results. In his mind, all votes in his favor are genuine and his opponents’ votes are fabricated — and he has to give the performanc­e of his life to sell the crowd his story. He wants to play the confident protagonis­t and aggrieved victim simultaneo­usly. All votes against him are rigged while any in his favor are legitimate.

American democracy should not rest on the belief that those who are the loudest or behaved the angriest are the most correct. Voting is not a performanc­e. It is an exercise of one of our citizenry’s most fundamenta­l rights. In American elections, we shake the hands of the winners and console the defeated. When John Adams lost reelection to Thomas Jefferson in the 1800 election, he gave us the road map for presidenti­al behavior. Presidents peaceably surrender power because our democracy is more important than any one person.

Whether Trump ultimately wins or loses, his actions now become his legacy. Government is not theater, and people need a leader who will move us forward and not simply revel in the roar of the crowd.

Ballot-counting is also not a nefarious scheme. People who work for our government do not do it for money or fame. They dedicate their profession­al lives to helping it operate predictabl­y and fairly. These people are our neighbors, the people who play piano at our religious services, and the people who volunteer at the library on weekends. They are not mustache-twirling villains engaged in a complicate­d plot. These people are average citizens doing an extremely stressful job, often for long hours with little pay. They do it because they want it fair and right. They want democracy to work for all of us, not just for some of us.

We must, as a nation, keep in mind that every presidenti­al election really exists as 50 separate state elections conducted on the same day. The hallmark of a democracy is a free and fair election. Every state has its own rules and regulation­s.

Disappoint­ment is not fraud. This election has shown us our strengths and our weaknesses, and both parties have a lot of work ahead of them. The voters have spoken through the ballot box, and it is up to our elected officials to pay careful attention to their voices.

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