By Matthew Walther
June 13, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - During the last month and a
half or so of the 2016 presidential election,
meta-arguments about how Donald Trump would respond to
his own (inevitable in the estimation of most observers)
defeat became more important than any of the apparent
issues in the campaign. Would he accept the results?
What this question was supposed to mean accept how?
psychologically? was far less important than the
response it was meant to elicit, which is to say, a
negative answer that would in turn become the pretext
for thousands of fear-mongering articles like this
one.
There were strong and weak theories about what form
the Celebrity Apprentice star's loss would take.
The most hysterical prognosticators, including his
Democratic opponent, argued that he would attempt to
destroy democracy itself. (How exactly he would go about
this was never very clear: Would he attempt a coup via
Twitter?) Others
suggested that his entire campaign had been a
marketing ploy all along, the teaser trailer for a
coming right-wing populist media empire in which Trump
would present himself as a kind of president-in-exile to
millions of delusional fans, endlessly agitating for
recounts and hawking branded water.
In these endeavors, few if any observers expected
Trump to receive support from the institutional GOP,
which had, with few exceptions, remained ambivalent
about its own presidential nominee. This was the
implicit bargain between Trump and Republican
leadership. Had he lost, he would have been
excommunicated; his swift political rise and equally
rapid fall would have been the occasion for an endless
I-told-you-sos, both from those who have come to
consider themselves his supporters and in what are now
the wild hinterlands of #NeverTrump conservatism.
(Whether casting him into outer darkness would have been
as easy as congressional Republicans and the editors of
conservative publications would have liked is an
interesting question.)
We all know what happened instead. After months of
harangue from his opponent and the media about the
existential importance of resigning himself to an
assured defeat, Trump won, and Democrats spent the next
four years very publicly doing most of the things they
had predicted would ensue if things had gone the
opposite way. His presidency was regarded as invalid
from the moment he took the oath of office, for reasons
ranging from his being an agent of the KGB to the very
serious crime of not actually withholding aid to a minor
East European nationalist regime.
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Four years later, Joe Biden is openly
fantasizing about a scenario in which the
praetorian guard dispatches the senescent emperor
from his palace. Whether the former vice president
remembers the similar (and ultimately pointless)
discussions from 2016 is an open question, but not
an especially important one. What matters more is
the current barely concealed relish at the prospect
of the current president being removed from the
White House by force. Never mind the fact that these
lurid speculations exist alongside equally lunatic
assertions that we are living under a Trump-led
military dictatorship: What they reveal about the
American attitude toward presidents and their
legitimacy is far more interesting than their
internal coherence.
There's little reason to think any of us are prepared
to accept the results of the upcoming election, at least
not unequivocally. This unwillingness has less to do
with the candidates themselves or the circumstances
surrounding individual elections than with the
chiliastic terms upon which presidential campaigns are
waged in this country. These are not quadrennial
contests between two parties offering competing sets of
prudential solutions to the nation's problems: They are
spiritual wars in which the righteousness of one side
and the iniquity of the other are both blindingly
obvious to all persons of good will.
This is why George W. Bush's first presidential
victory was dismissed by mainstream liberals as the
result of either counting-related malfeasance or a plot
by the Supreme Court or both, and why his re-election
must have had something to do with rigged voting
electronic voting machines. It is also why millions of
us convinced ourselves that Barack Obama must have been
born abroad and that Trump was working for the Russians.
These conclusions, absurd and conspiratorial as they
are, follow effortlessly from the twin premises that
every presidential election is an all-or-nothing contest
between good and evil and that the sovereign will of the
people is inviolable. This is why even when genuine
support for the wrong side is acknowledged not every
vote is the result of a fraudulent ballot or a tweet
from a Russian troll bot we insist upon delegitimizing
the voters in question. The 47 percent and the basket of
deplorables are mirror images of each other, and not
only because simple arithmetic suggests that they must
refer to many of the same voters. Rather than accept the
idea that millions of our fellow Americans have simply
drawn different conclusions about the candidates, which
might call into question either the presumed stakes of
our elections or the wisdom of self-government, we
insist upon pushing them outside the boundaries of
politics: people who vote in bad faith and (at least
implicitly) should not be regarded as contributing to
the actual democratic process. The plainer alternative
explanation that elections are messy things and voters
frequently irrational and almost never deserving of the
flattery bestowed upon them by candidates from both
parties is one that we have become mysteriously
incapable of considering.
Beginning as we do from such premises, it should be
no surprise that none of us are prepared to accept any
political outcomes that we find objectionable. So far
from subverting our democracy, disregarding the results
of our elections has become one of the most reliable
norms in American politics.
Matthew Walther is a national
correspondent at The Week. His work
has also appeared in First Things,
The Spectator of London, The
Catholic Herald, National Review,
and other publications. He is currently writing a
biography of the Rev. Montague Summers. He is also a
Robert Novak Journalism Fellow. -
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