By Rich Lowry
Friday, June 26, 2020
President Donald Trump and former vice president Joe
Biden agree on one thing — the other side is trying to steal the election.
Trump told a gathering of students in Phoenix that this
“will be, in my opinion, the most corrupt election in the history of our
country.”
He amplified the point, a constant theme of his, in a
tweet: “RIGGED 2020 ELECTION: MILLIONS OF MAIL-IN BALLOTS WILL BE PRINTED BY
FOREIGN COUNTRIES, AND OTHERS. IT WILL BE THE SCANDAL OF OUR TIMES!”
The president of the United States actively undermining
faith in the electoral process is gross and unprecedented, but he’s not alone.
Asked by Trevor Noah of The Daily Show whether he
worried the election would be rendered “moot” by his supporters’ being
prevented from voting, Biden replied: “It’s my greatest concern. My single
greatest concern. This president is going to try to steal this election.”
This wasn’t an isolated comment. “Mark my words,” he
warned in May, “I think he is going to try to kick back the election somehow,
come up with some rationale why it can’t be held.”
Yes, if there is one thing everyone can now agree on,
it’s our inability to pull off a free and fair election.
We are probably headed to the ugliest electoral smashup
since 1876, when the contest between Republican Rutherford B. Hayes and
Democrat Samuel Tilden went into overtime, with each party claiming it had won
Florida, Louisiana, and South Carolina.
Perhaps a handy victory by Biden or, much less likely,
Trump, will take the edge off the post-game acrimony, but it is going to be
ugly regardless. If the election is close, the aftermath will be a norm-busting
extravaganza of conspiracy theories, lawsuits, and, at the very least, threats
to take it to the streets.
If Trump loses, there’s unlikely to be a concession phone
call — one of the little grace notes of our democracy — and he will argue that
he was undone by Democratic cheating. Heck, he won in 2016 and still
maintained he’d been cheated.
The transition would surely be unlike any we’ve ever
seen, with the incumbent routinely insulting his soon-to-be successor. Trump
would be likelier to live-tweet Biden’s inauguration than to attend.
And if he wins, it could be even worse.
There were protests in the streets after he won in 2016.
In the supercharged atmosphere of 2020, we shouldn’t be surprised by riots.
After once again believing he’d inevitably lose and facing another intolerable
four years of President Trump, the Left’s shock and despair would be unlike
anything either side in our politics has experienced in memory.
It’s not going to lead Trump’s opposition to conclude:
“Oh, well. We ran another flawed candidate and got overconfident again. We’ll
retool and see you in 2022 and 2024.”
One of the ironies of the 2016 election is that Democrats
rightly scolded Trump for preparing the ground not to accept the election
result. Then, when he won, they resisted accepting the result themselves,
preferring to believe that the election had been stolen by Russia.
A close result will obviously magnify feelings on both
sides. The Florida vote controversy of 2000 was the height of recent domestic
contention over a presidential election. Looking back, though, it was
remarkably tame.
With control of the presidency hanging by a thread in
Florida, there were no large-scale demonstrations, let alone violence. The
legal briefs flew fast and furious, and both former president George W. Bush
and former vice president Al Gore wanted to win and distrusted the legal and
electoral maneuvers of the other side.
Yet there were things that neither of them would say in
public, and both of them were willing, if it came to that, to concede with
grace. Both men were shaped by the post-World War II consensus in American politics.
They had absorbed its standards and reflexively honored its guardrails.
That was 20 years, and an eon, ago.
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