Most Democrats fear Trump could reject election
defeat, poll shows
As many as 75% of Biden voters worry that if Trump
loses election he will refuse to concede defeat, triggering a constitutional
crisis
Donald Trump has spent months spreading disinformation
and attacking the integrity of the voting process.
David Smith
in Washington
@smithinamerica
Wed 2 Sep
2020 07.30 BSTLast modified on Wed 2 Sep 2020 07.31 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/sep/02/democrats-fear-trump-reject-election-defeat-poll
Three in four
supporters of Democratic challenger Joe Biden are worried about the prospect of
Donald Trump rejecting the US presidential election result if it goes against
him, an Opinium Research poll for the Guardian shows.
The survey
underlined fears that the president will not accept the outcome of November’s
race, triggering a constitutional crisis. Last week two congressional Democrats
wrote to the Pentagon seeking assurance that the military would ensure an
orderly transfer of power.
Nearly half
of all Americans (47%) say they are worried about the possibility of Trump
losing the election but refusing to concede defeat, Opinium found. Among Biden
voters, that figure climbs to 75%, whereas for Trump voters it stands at 30%.
Conversely,
two in five (41%) Trump voters are worried that Biden will lose but not
concede, as opposed to one in four Biden voters (28%).
Trump has
spent months spreading disinformation and attacking the integrity of the voting
process. He declared in August: “The only way we’re going to lose this election
is if the election is rigged.” It appears that he is making some headway in
encouraging Americans to distrust their democracy.
Three in
five (60%) Trump voters are worried that the election is being rigged,
according to the poll. More than half of Biden voters (53%) share the same
concern.
The
president has repeatedly sought to delegitimise mail-in voting, expected to
surge to a record high because of the coronavirus pandemic, making baseless
claims that it is prone to irregularities. Despite the lack of evidence, these
broadsides appear to have gained some traction.
Three in
four (73%) Trump voters are worried about mail-in voting being used to commit fraud,
according to Opinium, more than double the share of Biden voters (36%) with the
same anxiety.
In
addition, a majority of both camps are worried about the beleaguered postal
service not being able deliver ballots for mail-in voting in time and that
their vote won’t be counted properly. More than a third of citizens are worried
that they won’t be able to cast their vote.
Five states
already vote almost entirely by mail and the practice has been growing
nationally with each presidential election. The pandemic is expected to
accelerate that trend, from 20.9% in 2016 to 39% who say they vote by mail in 2020.
There is a
stark partisan divide that Trump is apparently seeking to exploit. More than
two in three (68%) of the president’s supporters say they intend to vote in
person, while just one in four (27%) intend to vote by mail.
By
contrast, more than half (56%) of Biden supporters plan to vote by mail and two
in five (39%) intend to vote in person. The imbalance has raised fears that
media outlets will jump the gun and project a winner based on in-person votes,
long before the mail-in ballots are counted. A state such as Virginia might
appear to favour Trump on the night but trend towards Biden as the days pass.
A potential
scenario was summarised by Crooked Media’s daily newsletter: “We could see
election-night results that skew overwhelmingly towards Trump, with days of lag
time before all the Biden ballots get counted. It’s a possibility that
journalists should be prepared for, in the event that Trump tries to claim
victory based on incomplete returns.”
Opinium
Research’s poll confirms that many people are braced for a break from the
tradition of a winner being declared in the early hours of the morning after
election day.
Just 36% of
Americans say they expect to know the result the next day, with 23% expecting
to know within the next week and 17% saying some time later on in November. The
disputed 2000 election between George W Bush and Al Gore prompted an epic legal
battle that was not settled by the supreme court until 12 December.
Opinium
surveyed 2,002 American adults between 21 and 25 August, after the Democratic
national convention but before the Republican one. The survey was conducted
online and weighted to represent the US adult population according to
demographics, education and past voting behaviour.
It found
Biden leading Trump by a huge 15 points – 56% to 41% – among those who are
registered to vote and indicate that they are certain to do so. In swing states
Wisconsin and Florida, Biden enjoys leads of 14 points (56% v 42%) and seven
points up (53% v 46%) respectively.
Biden has a
big advantage over Trump on the issues of healthcare and race relations but
trails the president on the economy (42% for Trump v 39% for Biden). This
remains one of the Trump campaign’s big hopes, given the importance of the
economy in past elections; Trump has been pushing for businesses and schools to
reopen despite the persistence of Covid-19.
Biden’s
selection of Senator Kamala Harris as his running mate has also boosted his
standing. Americans are more confident that Harris would be ready to take on
the presidency if the situation arose (52%) than the current vice-president,
Mike Pence (47%).
Opinium
Research’s findings come amid growing concerns in some quarters that Trump, who
has routinely pushed boundaries and shattered norms, even delivering his
Republican national convention acceptance speech at the White House, is
determined to cling to power irrespective of the election outcome.
Last week
the Washington Post reported that Democratic congresswomen Elissa Slotkin of
Michigan and Mikie Sherrill of New Jersey wrote to Gen Mark Milley, the
chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, and the defense secretary Mark Esper,
noting the military’s obligations to follow the orders of the legitimately
elected commander in chief.
“The
questions would have been almost unthinkable at any time in the nation’s
history outside of the civil war,” the Post observed. “The two asked Milley if
he was aware that the Uniform Code of Military Justice ‘criminalizes mutiny and
sedition’ and if he understood that he was legally bound to follow the lawful
orders only of the legitimately elected president.”
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