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Trump's Big Lie Devoured the G.O.P. and Now Eyes Our Democracy

  
Via:  Bob Nelson  •  4 years ago  •  16 comments

By:   Thomas L. Friedman - The New York Times

Trump's Big Lie Devoured the G.O.P. and Now Eyes Our Democracy



Respect for election integrity is now a disqualifier for membership in the Republican Party.

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Before our eyes, the Republican Party is becoming more and more openly fascist.

It openly attacks the right to vote. It openly discriminates on race and religion.

Worst of all... it openly is trying to impose a false history on the nation.

The Big Lie.



S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



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Damon Winter/The New York Times

President Biden's early success in getting Americans vaccinated, pushing out stimulus checks and generally calming the surface of American life has been a blessing for the country. But it's also lulled many into thinking that Donald Trump's Big Lie that the election was stolen, which propelled the Capitol insurrection on Jan. 6, would surely fade away and everything would return to normal. It hasn't.

We are not OK. America's democracy is still in real danger. In fact, we are closer to a political civil war — more than at any other time in our modern history. Today's seeming political calm is actually resting on a false bottom that we're at risk of crashing through at any moment.

Because, instead of Trump's Big Lie fading away, just the opposite is happening — first slowly and now quickly.

Under Trump's command and control from Mar-a-Largo, and with the complicity of most of his party's leaders, that Big Lie — that the greatest election in our history, when more Republicans and Democrats voted than ever before, in the midst of a pandemic , must have been rigged because Trump lost — has metastasized. It's being embraced by a solid majority of elected Republicans and ordinary party members — local, state and national.

"Denying the legitimacy of our last election is becoming a prerequisite for being elected as a Republican in 2022," observed Gautam Mukunda, host of Nasdaq's "World Reimagined"podcast and author of the book "Indispensable: When Leaders Really Mattered."

"This is creating a filter that over time will block out anyone willing to tell the truth about the election." It will leave us with "a Republican Party where you cannot rise without declaring that the sun sets in the East, a Republican Party where being willing to help steal an election is literally a job requirement."

This is not an exaggeration. Here is what Representative Anthony Gonzalez, one of the few Republicans who voted to impeach Trump, told The Hill about the campaign within the party to oust Representative Liz Cheney from her House G.O.P. leadership position, because of her refusal to go along with the Big Lie:

"If a prerequisite for leading our conference is continuing to lie to our voters, then Liz is not the best fit. Liz isn't going to lie to people. … She's going to stand on principle."

Think about that for a second. To be a leader in today's G.O.P. you either have to play dumb or be dumb on the central issue facing our Republic: the integrity of our election. You have to accept everything that Trump has said about the election — without a shred of evidence — and ignore everything his own attorney general, F.B.I. director and election security director said — based on the evidence — that there was no substantive fraud.

What kind of deformed party will such a dynamic produce? A party so willing to be marinated in such a baldfaced lie will lie about anything, including who wins the next election and every one after that.

There is simply nothing more dangerous for a two-party democracy than to have one party declare that no election where it loses is legitimate, and, therefore, if it loses it will just lie about the results and change the rules.

That's exactly what's playing out now. And the more one G.O.P. lawmaker after another signs on to Trump's Big Lie, the more it gives the party license at the state level to promote voter suppression laws that ensure that it cannot lose ever again.

Kimberly Wehle, a professor at the University of Baltimore School of Law and author of the book "How to Read the Constitution — and Why," writing in The Hill on Monday, noted that "as of late March, state legislators have introduced 361 bills in 47 states this year that contain limitations around voting, a 43 percent increase from just a month earlier.

"The measures include things like enhanced power for poll 'monitors,' fewer voting drop-boxes, restrictions on voting by mail, penalties for election officials who fail to purge voters from the rolls, and enhanced power in politicians over election procedures."

Although G.O.P. supporters of these bills insist that they are about election integrity and security, Wehle added, "the lack of actual evidence of fraud and mismanagement in the American electoral system totally belies those cynical claims."

This is the equivalent of lighting a fuse to a bomb planted beneath the foundations of our democracy.

Imagine if all or many of these measures are passed — and in 2022 and 2024 Republicans manage to retake the House, Senate and White House with, say, only 42 percent of the popular vote, effectively establishing minority rule. Do you know what will happen? Let me tell you what will happen. Disenfranchised Democratic voters will not sit idly by. They may refuse to pay their taxes. Many will take to the streets. Some might become violent, and our whole political system could become paralyzed and start to unravel.

Yet, this is precisely the path that Trump's G.O.P. is setting us on.

Personally, I have reservations about where the left of the Democratic Party is pulling Biden on some economic, immigration, foreign policy and education issues. But Biden and his party are putting forth real ideas to try to address the real challenges that an increasingly diverse 21st-century America needs to address to become a more perfect union. The best tool for keeping the Democratic Party close to the center-left on more issues is a healthy Republican Party that hews to the center-right.

We don't have that. We have, instead, a G.O.P. trying to cling to power by leveraging a Big Lie into voter suppression laws that leverage the party back to power by appealing solely to a largely white 20th-century America. Trump's G.O.P. is making no effort to offer conservative alternatives to the issues of the day. Its whole focus is on how to win without doing that.

Which is why it is incumbent on every American to support in every way possible the few principled Republican legislators fighting this trend from the inside — like Liz Cheney, Representative Adam Kinzinger and Senator Mitt Romney.

What I learned covering the struggle for the future of the Arab-Muslim world post-9/11 is that the war of ideas inside is everything . Sure, it is important for outsiders to condemn bad behavior, but their voices have limited impact. Real change happens only when the war of ideas is won by insiders, working from the roots upward.

On Monday, CNN quoted Cheney as telling Republican donors and scholars at a retreat for the American Enterprise Institute in Sea Island, Ga.: "We can't embrace the notion the election is stolen. It's a poison in the bloodstream of our democracy. … We can't whitewash what happened on Jan. 6 or perpetuate Trump's Big Lie. It is a threat to democracy. What he did on Jan. 6 is a line that cannot be crossed." A "peaceful transfer of power must be defended."

She could not be more right. And without a war of ideas inside the party, one that is won by principled Republicans, we run the real risk of a political civil war in America over the next election.

Things are not OK .

Unless more principled Republicans stand up for the truth about our last election, we're going to see exactly how a democracy dies.


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Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
1  seeder  Bob Nelson    4 years ago

original By posting to this seed, you are  agreeing  to abide by the  Group's Rules .

Unless more principled Republicans stand up for the truth about our last election, we're going to see exactly how a democracy dies.
 
 
 
SteevieGee
Professor Silent
1.1  SteevieGee  replied to  Bob Nelson @1    4 years ago

This is all Trump's plan.  We could call it Plan B.   Plan A, of course was winning the election but he was laying the groundwork for Plan B years ahead of the 2020 election by attacking the integrity of our elections.

 
 
 
321steve - realistically thinkin or Duu
Sophomore Participates
1.1.1  321steve - realistically thinkin or Duu   replied to  SteevieGee @1.1    4 years ago
We could call it Plan B

or plan  D

IMO: Plan B was his intimidation of congress and election officials.

plan C was his insurrection. 

One thing about trump is he will leave no stone unturned, no individual unscathed and no option unused in his quest to get whatever trump wants. All the while protecting himself and using others who to him are dispensable at the drop of a hat. 

Thats been trump's MO all of his life. As he leaves a constant trail of tears in his wake.

sad

 
 
 
TᵢG
Professor Principal
2  TᵢG    4 years ago

No question that something is seriously wrong with politics in the USA.   How can any rational adult believe that Trump really won reelection but that Biden, et. al. stole it?   To believe that they must think Biden, et. al. capable of pulling off an historic and unique steal of a presidential election that Trump had predicted in late 2019?   Trump, knowing that the election was 'rigged' was unable, as the president of the United States, to prevent this from happening.   And worse, the perps who pulled this off did so without leaving a shred of evidence!

So Trump knew, could not stop it and the election was stolen from him without leaving an evidence trail.

I repeat, how can any rational adult believe this?   So how screwed up is a nation who has tens of millions of irrational voters?

 
 
 
Gordy327
Professor Guide
2.1  Gordy327  replied to  TᵢG @2    4 years ago

No rational person would believe it. But then, it seems there are many people who are not rational. 

 
 
 
Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
2.2  seeder  Bob Nelson  replied to  TᵢG @2    4 years ago

I wonder how many Trumpists actually believe the Big Lie.

I suspect that most do not believe it... but go along with the fiction, because that is what their Tribe is doing...

Loyalty to the Tribe is the highest imperative.

 
 
 
TᵢG
Professor Principal
2.2.1  TᵢG  replied to  Bob Nelson @2.2    4 years ago
Loyalty to the Tribe is the highest imperative.

Intellectual dishonesty, confirmation bias, herd-mentality, surrender of critical thinking, etc.    All bad qualities for an electorate.   

 
 
 
Gordy327
Professor Guide
2.2.2  Gordy327  replied to  Bob Nelson @2.2    4 years ago

It doesn't really matter how many believe it. It's already too many.

 
 
 
321steve - realistically thinkin or Duu
Sophomore Participates
2.2.3  321steve - realistically thinkin or Duu   replied to  TᵢG @2.2.1    4 years ago
Intellectual dishonesty, confirmation bias, herd-mentality, surrender of critical thinking, etc.    All bad qualities for an electorate. 

Just the kind of humans that are perfectly suited to belong to a cult though.  The bulk of trump's followers closed minded and easily led. 

sad

 
 
 
Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
2.2.4  seeder  Bob Nelson  replied to  TᵢG @2.2.1    4 years ago

... and they may soon govern the country. Forever.

 
 
 
TᵢG
Professor Principal
2.2.5  TᵢG  replied to  Bob Nelson @2.2.4    4 years ago

Why do you think that?

 
 
 
Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
2.2.6  seeder  Bob Nelson  replied to  TᵢG @2.2.5    4 years ago

Voter suppression, gerrymandering... with the Supreme Court as backup.

Biden won because millions couldn't accept four more years of Trump... but I don't imagine the same turnout for midterms.

January Sixth showed us that violence is also okay for them, and that if they get power they will resort to any means to keep it.

America would have to massively agree that shutting out the fascists is more important than any policy, left or right. I don't see that happening.

It's like an election in Gaza: ''one man, one vote, one time''. If Hamas wins that four-year term, there won't be another election for fifteen years... and counting.

The fascists want the same, here.

 
 
 
pat wilson
Professor Participates
2.2.7  pat wilson  replied to  Bob Nelson @2.2.6    4 years ago

I think (and hope) we may be in the midst of a trump "bubble".

a situation in which the value of trumpism appears to be based on implausible or inconsistent views about the future.

 
 
 
Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
2.2.8  seeder  Bob Nelson  replied to  pat wilson @2.2.7    4 years ago

I hope you're right... but I see no signs of fascist fervor diminishing.

 
 
 
pat wilson
Professor Participates
2.3  pat wilson  replied to  TᵢG @2    4 years ago
And worse, the perps who pulled this off did so without leaving a shred of evidence!

And it was only the presidential candidates on the ballots that were affected, just those. All the down ballot votes were legit. Please jrSmiley_87_smiley_image.gif

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
3  Buzz of the Orient    4 years ago

A person could be convinced by what has happened to the GQP, how most Republicans have given up principle, and what they are trying to do, could convince a person that Authoritarianism may be more beneficial to the people than Democracy.  

GQP.jpg

And that would be very sad. 

 
 

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