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- Trump’s fake voter fraud allegations continue to get laughed out of court and his administration’s own AG Bill Barr said yesterday that the Justice Department has found no meaningful evidence of voter fraud.
- Republicans are torn. They know Biden won fair and square and want voters to trust the democratic process, but they’re too cowed by the Cult of Trump to say “enough.”
- One rare Republican with intergrity said plainly that Trump’s lies about election fraud are going to get someone killed. Meanwhile, GOP Sen. Ron Johnson said admitting Trump lost is “political suicide.”
- Given Trump’s cult of personality-like hold over his flock, it could take a generation for millions of conservatives to believe a Republican electoral defeat is legitimate.
- This is an opinion column. The thoughts expressed are those of the author.
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Trump’s fake voter fraud allegations continue to get laughed out of court. He’s literally running out of states in which to stage his very pathetic coup attempt. And his administration’s own attorney general Bill Barr told the Associated Press on Tuesday, “We have not seen fraud on a scale that could have affected a different outcome in the election.”
Within a few hours, the Justice Department tepidly softened Barr’s statement, adding that the investigation which has turned up no meaningful voter fraud is not yet completed.
Barr has been one of Trump’s most loyal attack dogs, so this all should be over now, but it won’t be. A number of diehard media Trumpists immediately pounced on Barr for his insolence, including Fox Business host Lou Dobbs, who called Barr “either a liar of a fool or both” and insinuated he might be “compromised.”
If Trumpism has shown us anything, it’s that it can always go lower.
And when it does Republicans will issue tepid throat-clearings rather than the more appropriate response to such despicable behavior: forceful denunciations.
One such lonely Republican, Georgia election official Gabriel Sterling, plainly and angrily said Trump's attack on the democratic process is "inspiring people to commit potential acts of violence" and "has to stop."
This is what Republicans should be doing, but Sterling is unrepresentative of his own party. More typical is Wisconsin Republican Sen. Ron Johnson, who reportedly told a former county-level Republican chairman that he knows Biden won fair and square but that to admit it publicly would be "political suicide."
Johnson's cynicism might keep him in good standing with the Cult of Trump. The cost is that extricating Trumpism from the Republican Party becomes impossible.
Even after Trump leaves the White House, hang-dog Republicans know he's still the boss.
Trump's lawyers v. Trump's attorney general
On cue upon Barr's statement clearing American democracy of any "Crimes Against Trump," the ever-more-disgraced Rudy Giuliani and fellow Trump lawyer Jenna Ellis released a statement saying Barr's "opinion appears to be without any knowledge or investigation of the substantial irregularities and evidence of systemic fraud."
This bears repeating: Trump's lawyers are arguing that Trump's Justice Department came to the conclusion the election was clean "without any knowledge or investigation."
Trumpism is not reality-based.
It's a grievance culture whose boogeyman changes on the whims of its most prominent conspiracy theorists and ultra-nationalists. That's how 2016's "economic anxiety" and fear of Muslim refugees and Latin American migrants morphed into 2020's terror over Black Lives Matter and antifa invading the suburbs.
Fact-based arguments go in one ear and out the other for the true Trump believers. It's fear that holds their imaginations.
Trump v. Trump's party
One of the reasons there is no bottom to Trumpist disinformation is Republicans have allowed themselves to be caught in Trump's trap.
GOP lawmakers, for the most part, dare not tell him to stand down and accept the will of the people, lest they incur a tweet that siccs the most excitable and least informed Trump followers upon them. This is in keeping with the tradition of the past four years where Republican lawmakers play footsie with Trump's most outlandish and baseless conspiracy theories when they're not endorsing them outright.
That's how you get a situation where Georgia Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler — currently campaigning in a runoff election that will determine the balance of power in the Senate — publicly endorses Trump's democracy-undermining scam. At the same time, one of her top campaign advisers publicly wishes Trump would knock it off because telling Georgia Republicans that the election was rigged is likely to depress voter turnout in the runoff.
Consequentially, numerous surveys since Election Day show Republicans don't trust the 2020 presidential election results. A You Gov/Bright Line Watch poll released this week showed only about 20% of Republicans believe Biden really won, and almost half think Trump will still be inaugurated once again on January 20.
The president — who still has not reassured the public that he respects the same democratic process that put him in office by issuing a basic concession of material facts — on Tuesday morning tweeted directly at Georgia's Republican Gov. Brian Kemp to "call off" those very same Senate runoff elections.
Notably, Trump's dictatorial call came in the form of a quote tweet of far-right Gateway Pundit honcho Jim Hoft, who shared a story from an obscure right-wing website about a random guy livestreaming his stalking of a rental truck that he's certain was carrying corrupt voting machines. That's it.
Dumb stuff to be sure, and not particularly novel in the Trump era.
We've all become numb to the many layers of malevolent stupidity Trumpism traffics in to keep its base angry and mistrustful of reality. But the President of the United States publicly and brazenly interfering with the democratic process, even after his legal team's multi-state faceplant, remains legitimately dangerous.
Trump's former lawyer Sidney Powell retweeted an image calling for a coup d'etat, a suspension of democracy, and "military tribunals." And one of his current lawyers, Joe DiGenova, said the Trump administration's recently fired Cybersecurity chief Christopher Krebs should be both "taken out at dawn and shot" and "drawn and quartered." And there is no shortage of examples of media Trumpists essentially calling for martial law.
Krebs' crime against the Cult of Trump was simply telling the truth, which is that "There is no evidence that any voting system deleted or lost votes, changed votes, or was in any way compromised."
Trump and his minions' undermining the integrity of the election through brazen lies dredged from the scumbucket of the internet isn't merely unseemly and distasteful. It's an attack that will leave permanent damage. Given Trump's cult of personality-like hold over his flock, it could take a generation for millions of conservatives to believe a Republican electoral defeat is legitimate.
Trump's tweets are not the harmless last gasps of an accident of history, when a corrupt, failed businessman posing as a tycoon on a TV game show became the leader of the free world.
There will come a time when Trump's mouthing off will not be news. But for as long as he's the president, his words have great consequence. And Republicans and conservative commentators who enable it with silence or outright support have failed their country.
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