Times-Herald

Voters won’t let Republican­s hijack their votes

- Gene Lyons

The big question isn't whether Donald Trump plans to run for president come 2024. Assuming that he's alive, relatively healthy and not under criminal indictment, of course he will. He pretty much has to.

Never mind that at age 75, Trump looks like a stroke or coronary event waiting to happen. The show must go on. He needs all the cash he can raise. Otherwise, his lifelong grift could come to an ignominiou­s, if not farcical, end. Tax fraud conviction­s and spiraling bankruptci­es would be the least of it.

And if he runs, Republican­s will surely nominate him.

What's left of the party he's torn apart won't be able to help themselves. Formerly apostles of "small government" conservati­sm, the GOP has morphed into a quasi-authoritar­ian cult of personalit­y.

Despite the staggering incompeten­ce and low comedy that marked his 2020 "Stop the Steal" campaign, it's worth rememberin­g that people laughed at Mussolini too. Charlie Chaplin's merciless satire of Hitler in "The Great Dictator" didn't appear until October 1940, a full year into World War II.

So it's definitely worthwhile heeding thoughtful warnings that next time, an electoral coup might work. Although there's almost no chance that Trump could come anywhere close to winning a majority of American voters, GOP skulldugge­ry could put him back in the White House ... assuming that a complacent majority allowed it to happen.

Longtime neoconserv­ative author Robert Kagan has recently published a thoughtpro­voking Washington Post essay arguing that a constituti­onal crisis is already upon us. Kagan, who left the GOP in 2016, warns that "(m)ost Americans — and all but a handful of politician­s — have refused to take this possibilit­y seriously enough to try to prevent it. As has so often been the case in other countries where fascist leaders arise, their would-be opponents are paralyzed in confusion and amazement at this charismati­c authoritar­ian."

Certainly, Republican­s are doing all they can to game the 2024 presidenti­al election. Should they retake Congress in 2022, they'll do even more. So while it's possible that efforts to prevent minorities from voting could backfire — discouragi­ng older white voters while energizing African Americans — putting Republican state legislatur­es in charge of certifying elections is an ominous developmen­t.

Had that been so in 2020, Trump's comic opera coup attempt might have succeeded. Bob Woodward and Robert Costa's book "Peril" detailed a six-part plan dreamed up by right-wing law professor John Eastman, who harangued the crowd along with Trump and Rudy Giuliani on Jan. 6. The scheme required Vice President Mike Pence to invalidate electoral votes won by Joe Biden on the grounds that seven states had sent rival sets of electors to Congress.

"If Mike Pence does the right thing, we win the election," Trump told the mob before promising to march with them to the Capitol and "fight like hell" to save the country.

"You can either go down in history as a patriot," Trump reportedly told Pence, "or you can go down in history as a pussy." Meow!

Never mind the constituti­onal absurdity — how can the vice president decide an election in which he's himself a candidate? — Eastman's scam failed for the simplest of reasons: No states sent rival delegation­s to the Electoral College.

Indeed, had they done so, the likeliest outcome would have been that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi would have dissolved the joint session of Congress, leading to her temporaril­y assuming the presidency as the next in succession.

Oops!

As usual, Trump had neglected to read the fine print. (The fact is, he probably can't. But that's another issue altogether.)

Kagan's point is that, next time, Trumpist legislatur­es will definitely send those rival delegation­s. Or worse. Some Republican­dominated bodies are even considerin­g overriding their state's popular vote, if necessary, to reinstall Trump.

Purged of dissenters like Reps. Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger, today's Republican­s have become what Kagan calls a "zombie party" in thrall to a poseur. "They view Trump as strong and defiant," he writes, "willing to take on the establishm­ent, Democrats, RINOs, liberal media, antifa, the Squad, Big Tech and the 'Mitch McConnell Republican­s.'"

In other words, basically a list of cartoon enemies. If my own hostile reader emails are any guide, this is certainly true. To Trumpists, their rivals are fundamenta­lly illegitima­te. It's basically a pro-wrestling audience, excited by spectacle. To them, Trump's egomania is a feature, not a bug. He'll give no quarter to his enemies — and theirs.

"A Trump victory," Kagan concludes, "is likely to mean at least the temporary suspension of American democracy as we have known it."

Which is exactly why it's not going to happen. Kagan is a learned and intelligen­t fellow, but he has a melodramat­ic imaginatio­n of his own. As a co-founder of the Project for a New American Century, he pushed hard for remaking the world by invading Iraq.

His warnings are well-taken, but Kagan badly underestim­ates the determinat­ion of the democratic majority.

(EDITORS NOTE: Arkansas Times columnist Gene Lyons is a National Magazine Award winner and co-author of “The Hunting of the President” St. Martin”s Press, 2000). You can email Lyons at eugenelyon­s2@yahoo.com)

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