Opinion
The
Editorial Board
Every
Vote in Every State Matters
Nov. 4,
2024, 1:00 a.m. ET
By The
Editorial Board
The
editorial board is a group of opinion journalists whose views are informed by
expertise, research, debate and certain longstanding values. It is separate
from the newsroom.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/04/opinion/congress-election-2024.html
In the years
in which Americans choose a president, that race usually monopolizes the
nation’s attention. There are, however, 469 other races this year to choose the
people who represent us in Washington, D.C.
Those
elections are, collectively, as essential to the governance of the United
States as the campaign for the White House. In addition to sculpting the
nation’s laws, Congress allocates the federal budget, approves the country’s
borrowing and regulates its commerce. It holds the authority to wage wars,
ratify treaties, confirm appointees and hold federal officials accountable
through investigations and the impeachment process.
In other
words, Congress is the body that enables or restrains the ambitions and agenda
of the White House. And while these core responsibilities won’t change no
matter who wins on Tuesday, if Donald Trump is re-elected president, the House
of Representatives and the Senate will be vital checks on what he could do in
office.
Mr. Trump
has demonstrated that he lacks the character, temperament and commitment to the
Constitution necessary to be trusted with the power and responsibility of the
presidency. He was impeached twice in his first term for actions in flagrant
defiance of his duties. He was criminally indicted on felony charges related to
his efforts to overturn the election. Yet many of the former president’s worst
instincts never came to pass in his previous administration. That’s not because
he moderated those instincts once in power, as some of his reluctant supporters
now suggest. The most important factor limiting the damage done by Mr. Trump’s
urges has always been others stepping in to stop him, from his own appointees
to members of the House and the Senate.
The first
major duty of this new Congress will be to ensure the peaceful transfer of
power. Its members will be sworn in on Jan. 3, 2025, three days before the Jan.
6 certification process to make official the winner of the presidential
election. Republicans in 2021 proved themselves unworthy of this basic
responsibility. Mr. Trump’s allies were complicit in the effort to overturn the
2020 election. A majority of House Republicans declined to certify the election
— the current speaker of the House, Mike Johnson, was one of the architects of
the schemes to overturn it — and a majority of Senate Republicans refused to
convict Mr. Trump for his role in that attempted coup, including the storming
of the Capitol.
Thankfully,
the Electoral Count Reform Act, passed by a bipartisan majority in 2022, goes a
long way toward reducing or eliminating opportunities for subterfuge,
regardless of who controls the two chambers. Election interference, if it
happens, is more likely to occur on the state level this time around. But the
continued indulgence of Mr. Trump’s false charges that the last election was
stolen or the next one will be provide ample reason not to want a Republican
leader wielding the gavel in either chamber.
Soon after,
the Senate will begin to consider and approve the president’s appointments.
Already, according to reporting by The Times’s newsroom, Mr. Trump’s aides are
suggesting that they will try to push through nominees for such positions
without the requisite vetting by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. If
re-elected, Mr. Trump has suggested he will prioritize base loyalty, rather
than experience or character, from his closest advisers and lieutenants.
Senators will need to prevent the most extreme or unqualified candidates from
taking cabinet positions like defense secretary and attorney general, as well
as seats on the high court and the federal bench. They can act to keep clearly
unfit candidates from holding any powerful position. That’s what the Senate did
in 2020, when it blocked Mr. Trump’s multiple attempts to appoint wildly
unqualified people to serve as members of the board of the Federal Reserve.
Congress
would then provide an essential backstop on abuses of presidential power. Mr.
Trump has said that he will wield the power of government against his political
rivals and curtail rights that Americans hold sacred. He has described plans to
prosecute “the enemy from within,” including members of Congress, judges and
journalists; to send troops into the streets of American cities against lawful
protesters; and to withhold money from state and local governments that do not
conform their policies to his preferences. He pledges a cruel policy of mass
deportations and threatens to shatter longstanding global alliances.
Members of
Congress can block some of those plans — a president needs the House to approve
spending for any substantial deportation plan, for example — and they play a
crucial oversight role for federal agencies and the executive branch. The House
also wields significant power to block or enable the Trump agenda through the
annual spending bills that must be passed to keep the government functioning.
This will be crucial should Mr. Trump try to carry out proposals to dismantle
the Department of Education or end Title IX’s protections against sex
discrimination or hobble the work of vital agencies like the Environmental
Protection Agency, the Internal Revenue Service and the Justice Department’s
civil rights division.
There are
other reasons to worry about the damage a Republican-controlled Congress could
do. Trump loyalists repeatedly blocked a series of Republican candidates — both
moderate and conservative — for speaker of the House, paralyzing Congress and
leaving it without leadership for the longest period since 1962. Since then,
the caucus has become better known for what it has tried to block, often under
Mr. Trump’s explicit orders, such as funding to keep the government open,
much-needed support for Ukraine’s defense against a Russian invasion and, most
hypocritically, border security legislation designed by conservative members of
their own party. Indeed, it is hard to think of a single piece of serious
legislation offered up by Mr. Johnson — despite his being an ally of Mr. Trump
— and his House. On the other hand, his record of supporting Mr. Trump’s
antidemocratic agenda is well documented.
Many of the
most competitive races for the House are in states that vote overwhelmingly for
Democrats, including seven in California and five in New York, along with
important races in Connecticut, Colorado, Michigan and Maryland. There are also
extremely close races in Arizona, Iowa, Pennsylvania, Maine, Nebraska and New
Mexico. Of the 43 most competitive races for the House this year, 22 of them
are considered tossups; every single vote in those races will be needed to
prevent Mr. Trump’s enablers from taking office.
There are
close Senate races in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Ohio and Michigan and
competitive races for Senate seats in Montana, Nebraska and Texas. We urge
voters to make certain to give their attention to those contests.
In survey
after survey, Americans said that they want more from their public servants.
Tuesday’s election offers them the chance to demand better.
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