Opinion / Columnist
Trump hammers nail into coffin of US's fake democracy
06 Nov 2020 at 19:08hrs | Views
WE all knew it was coming, and now it is here: an attempted coup. There is no other way to describe what US President Donald Trump did in the wee hours of Wednesday morning.
Standing in the East Room of the White House, the room where Franklin Delano Roosevelt and John F Kennedy lay in state, Trump stood up and uttered six words that constituted an unprecedented assault on the integrity of the US electoral system and the guts of our democracy.
"Frankly, we did win this election," he said.
As is frequently, if not always, the case with Trump, he accompanied this continued move towards authoritarianism with lies about widespread voter fraud and that he will go to the Supreme Court to stop votes from being counted.
Although one might think that we have lost our capacity to be shocked after five years of this kind of behaviour, this brazen attack on the more than 240 years of our democracy was striking for multiple reasons.
The first was its utter predictability. Trump and his allies like Attorney-General William Barr have been sowing doubt on the electoral process for months.
He has repeatedly declined to say he would accept defeat because, he said, his defeat would by definition mean that the election had been rigged.
The second, and perhaps even more disturbing reason, is the nation's diminished capacity for outrage.
On one level, this may not be surprising.
The ceaseless lies and ongoing attack on the fabric of our democracy have become so routine that it can be hard to feel the latest one on a visceral level.
I would argue, though, that, while understandable, this by itself is a profound cause for concern. The third is the comprehensive silence on the part of Republican leaders in the face of Trump's actions.
As we saw during the impeachment proceedings, the Republican Party has long since given up on any semblance of independent thought or action.
Utah Senator Mitt Romney was the sole Republican to vote in favour of Trump's conviction on abuse of power
charges.
Citing the challenges of coronavirus (Covid-19) and what they called outrageous media misrepresentation, the Republican National Committee made reasserting "the party's strong support for Trump and his administration" one of the central planks of the platform it highlighted at its August convention.
The same muted response was evident on Tuesday night after Trump's victory declaration.
Sure, commentators like long-time Republican presidential ombudsman Benjamin Ginsberg and former New Jersey governor Chris Christie offered critical comments on television, asserting that all votes must be counted.
But Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who used his victory speech to warn Democrats against pursuing "radical change", was silent.
So, too, was House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy. The fourth, and perhaps most important, is that Trump's action reminds and reinforces perhaps his presidency's central lesson: the future of our democracy lies with all of us. We, the people. Democrats and Republicans. Old, middle-aged and young.
Black, white, Latino, Asian and Native-American. Men, women and non-binary folks. Gay, straight, bisexual and questioning. Able-bodied and disabled. We must insist not only that each vote be counted, but that the results be honoured.
We must label plainly what is happening and speak out against it. And we must fight in this moment for the integrity of our form of government, as countless others have done before us in the more than two centuries since our democratic experiment began.
The counting continues. The fate and future health of our democracy, even after record levels of turnout in some states, is uncertain. The responsibility for our fate remains with us.
------
Lowenstein is an investigative journalist, author and the Padnos/Sarosik Endowed Chair of Civil Discourse at Grand Valley State University in the US. In 1995 he was a Fulbright Teacher at the Uthongathi School in Tongaat, South Africa, and in 2016 he taught an investigative journalism course at Wits University. His work has earned national and international recognition
Standing in the East Room of the White House, the room where Franklin Delano Roosevelt and John F Kennedy lay in state, Trump stood up and uttered six words that constituted an unprecedented assault on the integrity of the US electoral system and the guts of our democracy.
"Frankly, we did win this election," he said.
As is frequently, if not always, the case with Trump, he accompanied this continued move towards authoritarianism with lies about widespread voter fraud and that he will go to the Supreme Court to stop votes from being counted.
Although one might think that we have lost our capacity to be shocked after five years of this kind of behaviour, this brazen attack on the more than 240 years of our democracy was striking for multiple reasons.
The first was its utter predictability. Trump and his allies like Attorney-General William Barr have been sowing doubt on the electoral process for months.
He has repeatedly declined to say he would accept defeat because, he said, his defeat would by definition mean that the election had been rigged.
The second, and perhaps even more disturbing reason, is the nation's diminished capacity for outrage.
On one level, this may not be surprising.
The ceaseless lies and ongoing attack on the fabric of our democracy have become so routine that it can be hard to feel the latest one on a visceral level.
I would argue, though, that, while understandable, this by itself is a profound cause for concern. The third is the comprehensive silence on the part of Republican leaders in the face of Trump's actions.
As we saw during the impeachment proceedings, the Republican Party has long since given up on any semblance of independent thought or action.
Utah Senator Mitt Romney was the sole Republican to vote in favour of Trump's conviction on abuse of power
charges.
Citing the challenges of coronavirus (Covid-19) and what they called outrageous media misrepresentation, the Republican National Committee made reasserting "the party's strong support for Trump and his administration" one of the central planks of the platform it highlighted at its August convention.
The same muted response was evident on Tuesday night after Trump's victory declaration.
Sure, commentators like long-time Republican presidential ombudsman Benjamin Ginsberg and former New Jersey governor Chris Christie offered critical comments on television, asserting that all votes must be counted.
But Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who used his victory speech to warn Democrats against pursuing "radical change", was silent.
So, too, was House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy. The fourth, and perhaps most important, is that Trump's action reminds and reinforces perhaps his presidency's central lesson: the future of our democracy lies with all of us. We, the people. Democrats and Republicans. Old, middle-aged and young.
Black, white, Latino, Asian and Native-American. Men, women and non-binary folks. Gay, straight, bisexual and questioning. Able-bodied and disabled. We must insist not only that each vote be counted, but that the results be honoured.
We must label plainly what is happening and speak out against it. And we must fight in this moment for the integrity of our form of government, as countless others have done before us in the more than two centuries since our democratic experiment began.
The counting continues. The fate and future health of our democracy, even after record levels of turnout in some states, is uncertain. The responsibility for our fate remains with us.
------
Lowenstein is an investigative journalist, author and the Padnos/Sarosik Endowed Chair of Civil Discourse at Grand Valley State University in the US. In 1995 he was a Fulbright Teacher at the Uthongathi School in Tongaat, South Africa, and in 2016 he taught an investigative journalism course at Wits University. His work has earned national and international recognition
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