By Rich Lowry
Tuesday, November 01, 2022
Democracy is under threat — the wrong candidates
could win more votes than their opponents in hotly contested free and fair
elections.
That’s the worry of progressives insisting that
“democracy is on the ballot” in the midterms.
This trope, repeated endlessly on the center-left, is
offered as a reason why voters of conscience should cast aside their other
concerns and vote Democrat up and down the ballot.
If this argument seems a touch self-serving — indeed
functionally indistinguishable from run-of-the-mill partisan salesmanship —
it’s because it is.
As it happens, there is nothing in the actual behavior of
Democrats to suggest that they take their own rhetoric seriously and that they
believe “Stop the Steal” stalwarts running for, and potentially winning, key
races is indeed a national emergency.
If they really thought there were an existential threat
to democracy, Democrats would be eager to ally with Republicans who don’t deny
the 2020 election results. Of course, Democrats are trying to defeat these
candidates just as assiduously as the MAGA faithful — in other words, it’s
partisanship as usual.
If Democrats believed that the pro-Trump candidates are
committed to overturning our system of government, they would try to block them
every step of the way. Instead, they have often promoted exactly these
candidates in the GOP primaries in the (sometimes flagrantly mistaken) belief
that they’d be easier to defeat in the general. One would think a national emergency
calls for eschewing cynicism, not engaging in grotesque displays of it.
If the norms of our system are at risk, one might also
think it’d be important to foster and protect them in every way possible. Not a
chance. President Joe Biden was happy to unilaterally create a massive
student-debt-forgiveness program in a shameless exercise in imperial
government, and Democrats muse openly about packing the Supreme Court and
ending the filibuster to remove inconvenient checks on their power.
If election denial is itself a dire threat, progressives
should have made a pariah of Stacey Abrams, who denied her loss in the Georgia
gubernatorial election in 2018 and spread misinformation about alleged voter
suppression in a state with a model electoral system; to the contrary, they
made her a national celebrity and happily repeated her dubious claims.
If the election is about protecting democracy over and
above anything else, Democrats should be setting aside all their positions on
hot-button issues that make Republicans reluctant to vote for them — on
abortion, climate change, guns, and so on. Naturally, they are more dug in on
these issues than ever. If they have to choose between protecting democracy and
advancing their pet left-wing causes, the pet left-wing causes win every time.
At the very least, if Democrats fear that MAGA candidates
will try to change the 2024 election result in Congress after the fact, they
should feel some urgency about passing the Electoral Count Reform Act, which
attempts to tighten up the rules to prevent such gamesmanship. Democrats are
bragging about passing all sorts of bills this year, yet not the one most
relevant to what they say is the foremost issue of our times. Biden is
promising if he gets a Democratic Congress again that the first bill he’d pursue
is . . . a radical pro-abortion law.
In short, democracy is not on the ballot, and not even
Democrats are acting like it is. That doesn’t mean that the “Stop the Steal”
candidates don’t present potential problems, or that election denial as such
isn’t corrosive. But Democrats are fooling themselves if they think they’d
accept a clear Trump victory in 2024 as legitimate any more than they did in
2016.
If there were a literal referendum on democracy, it’d
pass handily. As it is, though, no one is going to be convinced to vote for
down-the-line Biden-supporting progressives, with all their fevered obsessions,
because hypocritical, self-interested partisans say it’s what we owe to our
republic.
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