The Morning Call

To all the truth-tellers: Thank you

- By Thomas L. Friedman Friedman is an opinion columnist for The New York Times.

With so many families gathering, in person or virtually, for this most unusual Thanksgivi­ng after this most unusual election, if you’re looking for a special way to say grace this year, I recommend the West Point Cadet Prayer. It calls upon each of these future military leaders to always choose “the harder right instead of the easier wrong” and to know “no fear whentruth and right are in jeopardy.”

Because we should be truly thankful this Thanksgivi­ng that — after Donald Trump spent the last three weeks refusing to acknowledg­e that he’d lost reelection and enlisted much of his party in a naked power play to ignore the vote counts and reinstall him in office — we had a critical mass of civil servants, elected officials and judges whodid their jobs, always opting for the “harder right” that justice demanded, not the “easier wrong” that Trump and his allies were pressing for.

It was their collective integrity, their willingnes­s to stand with “Team America,” not either party, that protected our democracy when it was facing one of its greatest threats — from within. History will remember them fondly.

Who am I talking about?

I amtalking about FBI Director Christophe­r Wray, a Trump appointee, who in September openly contradict­ed the president and declared that historical­ly we have not seen “any kind of coordinate­d national voter fraud effort in a major election” involving mail-in voting.

I am talking about Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger — a conservati­ve Republican — who oversaw the Georgia count and recount and insisted that Joe Biden had won fair and square and that his state’s two GOP senators, David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler, did not garner enough votes to avoid election runoffs.

Perdue and Loeffler dishonorab­ly opted for the easier wrong and brazenly

demanded Raffensper­ger resign for not declaring them winners.

I am talking about Chris Krebs, the director of the Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency, who not only refused to back up Trump’s claims of election fraud, but whose agency issued a statement calling the 2020 election “the most secure in American history,” adding in bold type, “There is no evidence that any voting system deleted or lost votes, changed votes or was in any way compromise­d.”

Krebs did the hard right thing, and Trump fired him by tweet for it. Mitch McConnell, doing the easy wrong thing, did not utter a peep of protest.

I amtalking about the Republican-led Board of Supervisor­s in Maricopa County, Arizona, which, according to The Washington Post, “voted unanimousl­y Friday to certify the county’s

election results, with the board chairman declaring there was no evidence of fraud or misconduct ‘and that is with a big zero.’ ”

I am talking about Mitt Romney, the first (and still virtually only) Republican senator to truly call out Trump’s postelecti­on actions for what they really were: “overt pressure on state and local officials to subvert the will of the people and overturn the election.”

I am talking about U.S. District Judge Matthew Brann, a registered Republican, who dismissed Trump’s allegation­s that Republican voters in Pennsylvan­ia had been illegally disadvanta­ged because some counties permitted voters to cure administra­tive errors on their mail ballots.

As The Washington Post reported, Brann scathingly wrote Saturday “that Trump’s attorneys had haphazardl­y stitched this allegation together ‘like Frankenste­in’s Monster’ in an attempt to avoid unfavorabl­e legal precedent.”

And I am talking about all the other election verificati­on commission­ers who did the hard right things in tossing out Trump’s fraudulent claims of fraud.

Asking for recounts in close elections was perfectly legitimate.

But when that failed to produce any significan­t change in the results, Trump took us to a new dark depth. He pushed utterly bogus claims of voting irregulari­ties and then tried to get Republican state legislatur­es to simply ignore the popular vote totals and appoint their own pro-Trump electors before the Electoral College meets Dec. 14.

That shifted this postelecti­on struggle from Trump versus Biden — and who had the most votes — to Trump versus the Constituti­on — and whohad the raw power and will to defend it or ignore it.

To all of these people who chose to do the hard right thing and defend the Constituti­on and the rule of law over their party’s interest or personal gain, may you have a blessed Thanksgivi­ng.

You stand in stark contrast to Bill Barr, Mike Pompeo (who apparently never attended chapel at West Point), Mike Pence, Rudy Giuliani, Lindsey Graham, Mitch McConnell, Kevin McCarthy, Nikki Haley, Kayleigh McEnany and all the other GOP senators and House members, who put their party and self-interest before their country and opted for the easy wrongs.

History will remember them too. Though Trump is now grudgingly letting the presidenti­al transition proceed, we must never, ever, forget the damage he and his allies inflicted on American democracy by attacking its very core — our ability to hold free and fair elections and transfer power peacefully. Tens of millions of Americans now believe something that is untrue — that our system is rigged.

Who knows what that will mean in the long run?

The depths to which Trump and his legal team sank was manifested last Thursday when Giuliani and Sidney Powell held a news conference alleging, among other things, that software used to disadvanta­ge Trump voters was created at the direction of the late Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez. It was insane.

As Jonah Goldberg, a conservati­ve critic of Trumpism, wrote in thedispatc­h.com: “The GOP’s social media account spewed sound bites from Powell and Giuliani out into the country like a fire hose attached to a sewage tank.” Fox carried the whole news conference live — uninterrup­ted — for virtually its entire 90 minutes.

Shame on all these people.

Sure, now Trump and many of his enablers are finally bowing to reality — but it is not because they’ve developed integrity. It is because they WERE STOPPED by all those people who had integrity and did the hard right things.

And “shame” is the right word for these people, because a sense of shame was lost these past four years and it needs to be reestablis­hed. Otherwise, what Trump and all his sycophants did gets normalized and permanentl­y erodes confidence in our elections. That is how democracie­s die.

You can only hope that once they are out of power, Barr, Pompeo, Giuliani and all their compatriot­s will be stopped on the streets, in restaurant­s or at conference­s and politely but firmly asked by everyday Americans: “How could you have stayed all-in when Trump was violating the deepest norms that bind us as a democracy?”

And if they are deaf to the message being sent from their fellow citizens, then let’s hope some will have to face an interrogat­ion from their ownchildre­n at the Thanksgivi­ng table this year:

“Mom, Dad — did you really side with Trump when it was Trump versus the Constituti­on?”

 ?? BRYNNANDER­SON/AP ?? Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger, a conservati­ve Republican, defended the state’s election results.
BRYNNANDER­SON/AP Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger, a conservati­ve Republican, defended the state’s election results.

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