Americans are starting to get it: we can’t let
Trump – or Trumpism – back in office
Austin
Sarat and Dennis Aftergut
Republicans have put all their chips on extremism. But
voters are sending more and more signals that they’re fed up with it
Tue 30 Aug
2022 11.15 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/aug/30/trump-republicans-voters-midterms-democrats
Polls and
election results over the last week reminded Americans that politics seldom
moves in a straight line. As in physics, action produces reaction. Overreach
invites backlash.
For a long
while former President Trump and his cronies seemed to be immune from this rule
of political life and from the consequences of even the most outrageous
conduct. As Trump himself once famously said, “I could stand in the middle of
Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody and I wouldn’t lose voters.”
And so it
seemed. He escaped conviction in not one but two impeachment trials and cowed
Republican leaders to fall in line after the January 6 insurrection. He remains
the leading contender for the Republican party’s 2024 presidential nomination.
Today
Republicans are still falling over themselves to prove their loyalty to him by
outdoing each other in extremism.
On 19
August, a Republican candidate for Florida’s state assembly even took to
Twitter to call for violence against federal law enforcement officials. “Under
my plan,” Luis Miguel tweeted, “all Floridians will have permission to shoot
FBI, IRS, ATF and all other [federal agents] ON SIGHT! Let freedom ring!”
In
Washington, the US supreme court cast aside almost 50 years of settled
precedent to overturn Roe v Wade. Republican-dominated state legislatures
rushed to enact draconian restrictions on women’s reproductive rights.
This kind
of extremism may be off-putting to swing voters. There are signs that most
Americans aren’t ready to trade their rights and freedoms for a strongman and
his election-denying, rights-infringing, violence-threatening allies. As the
Cook Report’s Amy Walters wrote on 26 August: “The more Trump is in the news,
the more dangerous the political climate for the GOP.”
But let’s
start with the supreme court’s Dobbs decision.
Dobbs sent
shock waves across the political spectrum and has jolted Democratic turnout. On
25 August, Axios reported that immediately after Dobbs, “Democratic primary
turnout for governors’ races increased … in five of the eight states holding
contested primaries.”
Similarly,
a report from TargetSmart suggests that in states like Michigan and Wisconsin
“where reproductive rights are at stake”, women “are out-registering men by
significant margins.”
This
pattern portends a “pink wave” in November, as women mobilize to defeat
pro-life candidates. We saw evidence of this in the 23 August special
congressional election in New York, where Democrat Pat Ryan defeated Republican
Marc Molinaro, 52% to 48% in a bellwether swing district.
Ryan’s
campaign message was largely focused on protecting abortion rights. His victory
follows the striking 2 August referendum vote in Kansas, where voters
overwhelmingly rejected an attempt to ban abortion.
Are
Republicans being taught a lesson they should have learned from history?
When the
supreme court gets too far out in front of – or too far behind – the American
public by ignoring American sentiment, political backlash results. That
happened in the 1850s in the run-up to the civil war and in the 1930s when the
conservative court that Franklin Roosevelt inherited struck down a new minimum
wage law.
It happened
again after Roe v Wade, when abortion foes reacted and organized for a 50-year
battle that resulted in a reactionary court majority.
Republicans
may now be reaping what those reactionaries on the court sowed.
And it
isn’t only that many Americans have been alarmed and aroused by what the court
did last June. They are also awakening to the threats posed by Trump’s “big
lie” and the election denial it has inspired.
Democratic
messaging that has called out the “big lie”, along with the meticulously
presented hearings of the January 6 congressional hearings, seem to be taking
root.
Americans
are coming to see that, as President Biden has warned, “A poison is running
through our democracy … with disinformation massively on the rise. But the
truth is buried by lies, and the lies live on as truth.”
At the
start of this summer’s January 6 hearings, Republican congresswoman Liz Cheney
echoed that sentiment: “People must pay attention. People must watch, and they
must understand how easily our democratic system can unravel if we don’t defend
it.”
An NBC News
poll last week suggests that the American people are indeed now paying
attention. It found that more respondents ranked “threats to democracy” as the
most important issue facing the country, more important than inflation or jobs.
Other polls
suggest that candidates who are running as election deniers or opponents of a
woman’s right to choose will pay a price in November.
Take
Pennsylvania, for example. A Franklin & Marshall poll released on 25 August
found that the Democratic candidate for the Senate, John Fetterman, is leading
Trump-endorsed election denier Mehmet Oz, 43% to 30%. Fetterman is also a vocal
abortion rights supporter, while Oz supported overturning Roe.
The same
poll also shows that the Democratic candidate for governor in Pennsylvania,
Josh Shapiro, leads the Trump favorite and abortion foe, Republican Doug
Mastriano, by 44% to 33%.
According
to the Washington Post, “In 2020, Mastriano tried to block Pennsylvania’s
certification of Biden’s victory by introducing a resolution asserting
incorrectly that the Republican-dominated legislature had the right to choose
which electors’ votes should be counted.” As the Post also notes, “He attended
the Jan. 6 riot … where he was captured on video crossing the police line.”
This is not
to say that in Pennsylvania or elsewhere the Trump fever has completely broken.
And polls are not the same thing as an election. But they are signs of hope.
Democracy
won’t save itself. Abortion rights will not restore themselves. The American
majority’s power to defeat Trumpism lies at the ballot box. If Trumpist
candidates lose in general elections, over time Republicans may get the message
that they’ve placed a losing bet on extremism.
There is
much to be done by Americans committed to preserving our republic and to saying
“no” to Trump. As former president Obama put it in his 2017 farewell address:
“It falls to each of us to be … jealous guardians of democracy.” Across
America, a majority of voters are ready to do just that.
Austin
Sarat is a professor of jurisprudence and political science at Amherst College
and the author of Gruesome Spectacles: Botched Executions and America’s Death
Penalty
Dennis
Aftergut is a former federal prosecutor, currently of counsel to Lawyers
Defending American Democracy
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