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Election Countdown, One More Day and a Wake-Up: Now It's Up to Us.

  
Via:  John Russell  •  2 weeks ago  •  8 comments

By:   James Fallows

Election Countdown, One More Day and a Wake-Up: Now It's Up to Us.
One thing we don't know, many things we do know.

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One thing we don't know, many things we do know. And some models for a better stage of American history that could be ahead.


James FallowsNov 04, 2024111Share this postCopy linkFacebookEmailNoteOther4515Share

Ninety-nine years ago, in October, 1925, Eleanor Roosevelt demonstrated how a voting machine worked, at the Women's Arts and Industries Exhibit at the Hotel Commodore in New York. At the time, American women had been able to cast votes in only two presidential elections, 1920 and 1924. This year they may be the decisive bloc in the election. (Bettmann/ Getty Images.)

On the first day of this year, I started this "Election Countdown" series. It followed a 152-item series called the "Trump Time Capsules" that I wrote during the 2016 campaign.

The headline on that first item this year was, "Three hundred and nine days that will change the world." The rationale was this:

The years after 2024 will depend on what happens to us in these upcoming days, and on what we do in response.

Recording what it is like for us to live through this period—when so much of the nation's future depends on each of us, but when none of us can know the outcome—is the aspirational theme for this upcoming series. A journal of the plague year, when we can't yet assess the disease's final toll. Periodic markers and measures of what people learned and said, of how they responded, of who did what in a time of maximum trial.

I have in mind a range of standing features on how institutions and individuals are meeting this moment's challenge. Naturally this will include the press, which is the institution I know best and the one that, in theory, can still make real-time corrections…

Let us hope, as I put it seven years ago [in writing a "Trump Time Capsule" series about the 2016 race], that people will look back on these 300-plus days with chastened wonder, and with cautionary guidance about our steps ahead.

Now we have just a day and a half until Election Day. Tens of millions of Americans have already cast their votes. If you're one of those who wait, as Deb and I usually do, for the ritual of casting your vote in person, be sure to be there on Tuesday!

Here is a very quick survey of where we stand now. I'll start with the main thing we don't know. And then move to the important things we certainly know, and then to a surprising model for the future.

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The one thing we don't know:


What is going to happen two days from now, and between then and next January 20, and beyond.

It's possible that right now votes could be "breaking" in a way that turns a very close race into a decisive result. Extreme example: the Carter-Reagan race in 1980 was considered too close to call until the very last days. When the votes were counted, they broke strongly in Reagan's favor. He carried 44 states. No one is imagining that this time. But polls can be wrong.

It's also possible that this year things will remain as close as the polls say, or become as contested as Bush-Gore in 2000. In any case, two days from now we pass a huge watershed.

The things we do know.


1) That Donald Trump is already declaring victory, and will do so more stridently on November 5. The press needs to be prepared.


As I wrote recently about the powerful new movie The Apprentice, among the lessons young Donald Trump absorbed from his mentor, Roy Cohn, was: always claim victory, no matter the score. Never admit defeat, especially when you've lost.

Trump has been using that approach nonstop since 2020, with his "stop the steal" mantra now embraced by most of the GOP. For months he has been priming his base to believe that he is "way ahead" in all 2024 polls, so any result except a Trump victory must be a fraud.

Trump is sure to switch from saying "I will win" to "I have won" less than 48 hours from now. On Tuesday as the first exit polls come in, Trump himself will say that they look "better than anyone expected," so a big win is ahead. The Fox team will back him up. As the first real counts come in after 8pm from Pennsylvania, they will favor Trump, because of the usual GOP-skew of same-day-vote results. Trump will use them to announce he was won the crucial state and thus the election.

We saw this drill in 2020. It is likely to be worse this time. Partly that is because Trump has conditioned his entire party to expect fraud. Partly it is because the Fox News team that made a brave, correct, anti-Trump call of Arizona results four years ago has been fired for that transgression. From top to bottom Fox is now on board.

Word is that the Harris-Walz campaign team is fully prepared to rebut these false claims on Election Day, through social media and "normal" media as well. Democratic lawyers are geared to fight the inevitable courtroom battles that will follow. They won virtually all the "stop the steal" lawsuits after 2020.

But what about the media? The TV and radio networks? The AP? The big newspapers? They know what is coming from Trump and his team. Are they prepared to do more than simply "both-sides" claims about the results —that is, "balancing" the real numbers from state officials, versus Trump's victory claims?

In two days we'll see.

2) That Donald Trump is in the middle of an active, accelerating cognitive collapse, with enormous potential effects on our future.


I have no medical training. But years ago when I saw Lawrence Taylor, of the NY Giants, snap the leg of Joe Theismann, QB of the then-Redskins, in a televised game, like all other viewers I knew instantly that something terrible had occurred.

That is how nearly anyone must feel watching Donald Trump on the stump these days. It's not so much the ramble and the repetition and the shriveling vocabulary. It's the dis-inhibition: Talking about Liz Cheney in front of a firing squad three days ago. Making obscene gestures with a microphone two days ago. Saying today that he wouldn't mind if a gunman hit the press corps. There is no bottom.

If you have ever seen an elderly, demented person start erupting in out-of-character curses or profanities, you have seen "disinhibition." I've seen it. It's horrible and tragic. Now we see it every time we turn on the TV.

Three further points on "disinhibition" that seem relevant:

  • A gripping inside-reporting new piece from Tim Alberta, in the Atlantic, this weekend, about how rapidly Trump's disorders have worsened. The story opens with Trump's staff struggling to keep him from publicly calling Joe Biden a "retard." (That staff members are leaking these things is of course an enormous tell in itself.) Trump managed to keep that slur bottled up, but each day he lets more of them out.

  • A Substack post from Gary Marcus, who is trained in psychology, on the increasing before-our-eyes signs of disorder. Here is a Xitter-scale sample, of his much more detailed Substack presentation:

    :

  • The video of what preceded Trump's instantly notorious stunt with the microphone in Milwaukee two days ago. The final minute of the video at this link is what made the headlines (Trump lewdly caressing the mic). The preceding three minutes of the video are in a different way just as disturbing. Trump leads off a speech with a minutes-long, wholly inappropriate, spiteful rant about the "stupid people" on his staff who have messed up his sound systems. It is like nothing else I've ever seen from a major public figure—and we see it again and again.

Will any of this "matter" for the vote? Who knows. But it will matter tremendously if Trump should gain power. It means that voting for Trump means either voting for the chaos he embodies himself—or sooner or later empowering JD Vance, and all that Vance brings with him.

Democrats obviously hope that Trump's vulgarity and excesses might matter to voters. To women in general, to Puerto Rican voters in particular (most particularly in Pennsylvania), to Cheney-style Republicans, perhaps to others. The leaks and internal backbiting that Tim Alberta managed to collect suggest that some Republicans now think they Trump's conduct has mattered, and that they can help themselves by deflecting the blame. Sinking ships, rats, and so on.

It's notable that we're hearing practically nothing similar from the usually squabbling Dems. This is one of many reasons you would rather be in Harris's position now than Trump's. And that's not even counting her brief but very effective cold-open appearance last night on SNL.


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JohnRussell
Professor Principal
1  seeder  JohnRussell    2 weeks ago
Trump is sure to switch from saying "I will win" to "I have won" less than 48 hours from now. On Tuesday as the first exit polls come in, Trump himself will say that they look "better than anyone expected," so a big win is ahead. The Fox team will back him up. As the first real counts come in after 8pm from Pennsylvania, they will favor Trump, because of the usual GOP-skew of same-day-vote results. Trump will use them to announce he was won the crucial state and thus the election.
 
 
 
Gsquared
Professor Principal
1.1  Gsquared  replied to  JohnRussell @1    2 weeks ago

Trump will probably claim victory by 8 pm EST (5pm PST).  He will hope to suppress voters in the West who might think that if Trump already won why bother to go vote after work.  Of course, no one is buying his fraud and it may make many more determined to vote.

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
2  seeder  JohnRussell    2 weeks ago

 
 
 
Hallux
Professor Principal
2.1  Hallux  replied to  JohnRussell @2    2 weeks ago

I got to the 0:17 mark.

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
2.1.1  Buzz of the Orient  replied to  Hallux @2.1    2 weeks ago

Good for you.  I have no idea what it was.

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
3  Buzz of the Orient    2 weeks ago
"At the time, American women had been able to cast votes in only two presidential elections, 1920 and 1924. This year they may be the decisive bloc in the election."

How many times have I already posted on NT that if Kamala Harris loses, it will be the fault of the women of America who voted against their own best interests or did not vote at all?

 
 
 
Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
3.1  Sean Treacy  replied to  Buzz of the Orient @3    2 weeks ago

Hard to believe some women can think for themselves and don't follow your orders, huh? 

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
3.1.1  Buzz of the Orient  replied to  Sean Treacy @3.1    2 weeks ago

Those of us who are capable of understanding and using the English language are aware that my reference was to only the specific women I referred to and where did I "order" anyone to do anything?

 
 

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