5 Ways Trump has tried to attack democracy post-election

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May 11, 2020
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Five ways Trump has tried to attack democracy post-election

Full article here: After the fact: the five ways Trump has tried to attack democracy post-election

A well written and succinct analysis of how democracy and faith in the US election system has been damaged post-election. In hoping that at least part of the article will be read by Republicans/Conservatives & Democrats/Liberals alike, I have taken the liberty of copying & pasting a large part of it below.

List of five post-election attacks on democracy by Donald Trump and Republicans that were new in 2020 but might haunt elections for years to come.

Especially reckless and sustained election fraud charges


False accusations of election fraud are a fixture of US elections, but Trump has professionalized the enterprise, making more audacious and systemic claims of election fraud than ever before and coaxing more elected officials to go along with the lies than seemed possible before the Trump era.

Republicans normalized Trump’s false charges by treating them as “legal challenges”. But by declining to acknowledge the election result, Republicans lent weight to the notion that something unusual was afoot apart from Trump’s effort to subvert the popular will, and they held open a months-long window for Trump’s lies to circulate, during which faith in US democracy was damaged.

Political pressure on local elections officials

In healthier times for the US democracy, no one paid much attention to the certification process because it was taken as an article of unexamined faith that the vote was the vote and the only role officials had was to stamp it. Now there is a plain chance that officials might take direction from the White House, the Republican National Committee or someone else instead of voters.

External legal challenges to the certification of state election results

Lawsuits have developed around elections before, but never in US history has an election been followed by a legal battle of the scope mounted by the Trump campaign. Trump, the loser, sued in every state, with multiple lawsuits, where flipping the result could help him win.

The fact that Trump lost basically all the lawsuits might not discourage future presidential campaigns from building a national post-election legal strategy into their victory plan: if you can’t win at the ballot box, try the courts.

Internal political challenges to the certification of state election results

Goaded by Trump, legislators in Pennsylvania asked the Supreme Court to prevent certification by the state of its result. Republican Senate candidates in Georgia demanded that the Republican secretary of state withdraw from the certification there. The Republican Party in Arizona demonstrated extremely shrill behavior, demanding that the election not be certified and even challenging Twitter followers to express their willingness to die to prevent certification.

On the whole, efforts by these state elected officials to respond to Trump’s sudden demand that they overthrow what everyone had previously recognized as a democratic process were half-hearted and ineffectual. But if state elected officials get serious about disrupting the certification process, they might come more prepared in future elections.

The president’s role

Should a president of the United States, after an election, be calling up county election officials in charge of certifying the results? Should a president invite lawmakers weighing an intervention in their state’s certification process for lunch? Should a president call out the mob on Twitter against a local election official or a state secretary of state who has resisted his schemes?

Whatever damage US democracy has sustained in 2020, much of it traces back to the source, to a president who did not see anything wrong in 2019 with coercing a foreign leader to try to take out a political opponent, who made the fealty of state governors a condition of pandemic aid, and who now has twisted the arms of elected officials across the United States in an effort to subvert the will of American voters.

The role that Trump has played in attacking the integrity of the American system is the most outrageous and unprecedented of all the unholy perversions of democracy that 2020 has seen. Whether that role will be replicated or reprised in future White Houses, and in future elections, could make all the difference.
 
Five ways Trump has tried to attack democracy post-election

Full article here: After the fact: the five ways Trump has tried to attack democracy post-election

A well written and succinct analysis of how democracy and faith in the US election system has been damaged post-election. In hoping that at least part of the article will be read by Republicans/Conservatives & Democrats/Liberals alike, I have taken the liberty of copying & pasting a large part of it below.

List of five post-election attacks on democracy by Donald Trump and Republicans that were new in 2020 but might haunt elections for years to come.

Especially reckless and sustained election fraud charges


False accusations of election fraud are a fixture of US elections, but Trump has professionalized the enterprise, making more audacious and systemic claims of election fraud than ever before and coaxing more elected officials to go along with the lies than seemed possible before the Trump era.

Republicans normalized Trump’s false charges by treating them as “legal challenges”. But by declining to acknowledge the election result, Republicans lent weight to the notion that something unusual was afoot apart from Trump’s effort to subvert the popular will, and they held open a months-long window for Trump’s lies to circulate, during which faith in US democracy was damaged.

Political pressure on local elections officials

In healthier times for the US democracy, no one paid much attention to the certification process because it was taken as an article of unexamined faith that the vote was the vote and the only role officials had was to stamp it. Now there is a plain chance that officials might take direction from the White House, the Republican National Committee or someone else instead of voters.

External legal challenges to the certification of state election results

Lawsuits have developed around elections before, but never in US history has an election been followed by a legal battle of the scope mounted by the Trump campaign. Trump, the loser, sued in every state, with multiple lawsuits, where flipping the result could help him win.

The fact that Trump lost basically all the lawsuits might not discourage future presidential campaigns from building a national post-election legal strategy into their victory plan: if you can’t win at the ballot box, try the courts.

Internal political challenges to the certification of state election results

Goaded by Trump, legislators in Pennsylvania asked the Supreme Court to prevent certification by the state of its result. Republican Senate candidates in Georgia demanded that the Republican secretary of state withdraw from the certification there. The Republican Party in Arizona demonstrated extremely shrill behavior, demanding that the election not be certified and even challenging Twitter followers to express their willingness to die to prevent certification.

On the whole, efforts by these state elected officials to respond to Trump’s sudden demand that they overthrow what everyone had previously recognized as a democratic process were half-hearted and ineffectual. But if state elected officials get serious about disrupting the certification process, they might come more prepared in future elections.

The president’s role

Should a president of the United States, after an election, be calling up county election officials in charge of certifying the results? Should a president invite lawmakers weighing an intervention in their state’s certification process for lunch? Should a president call out the mob on Twitter against a local election official or a state secretary of state who has resisted his schemes?

Whatever damage US democracy has sustained in 2020, much of it traces back to the source, to a president who did not see anything wrong in 2019 with coercing a foreign leader to try to take out a political opponent, who made the fealty of state governors a condition of pandemic aid, and who now has twisted the arms of elected officials across the United States in an effort to subvert the will of American voters.

The role that Trump has played in attacking the integrity of the American system is the most outrageous and unprecedented of all the unholy perversions of democracy that 2020 has seen. Whether that role will be replicated or reprised in future White Houses, and in future elections, could make all the difference.
And to think that back in 2000, it was all about the hanging chad......Today suitcases full of ballots, voter machines that switched votes, yeah, nothing to see here, move along.

But remember retard, when your gasoline goes back to 4 dollars a gallon and your food costs skyrocket, all you can blame is the fucking morons like you who had to cheat to win...
 
Democrat Mass Voter Fraud is an attack on our democracy
Press bias is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the IRS as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the CIA as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the FBI as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the DOJ as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama spying on Trump is a is a threat to our democracy
Democrat hate and racism is a threat to our democracy
Biden taking bribes from China is a threat to our democracy
Hillary taking bribes from everyone is a threat to our democracy
Marxism is a threat to our democracy
Open borders is a threat to our democracy
Progressive Censorship is a threat to our democracy
Progressive Thought Crimes are a threat to our democracy
 
Five ways Trump has tried to attack democracy post-election

Full article here: After the fact: the five ways Trump has tried to attack democracy post-election

A well written and succinct analysis of how democracy and faith in the US election system has been damaged post-election. In hoping that at least part of the article will be read by Republicans/Conservatives & Democrats/Liberals alike, I have taken the liberty of copying & pasting a large part of it below.

List of five post-election attacks on democracy by Donald Trump and Republicans that were new in 2020 but might haunt elections for years to come.

Especially reckless and sustained election fraud charges


False accusations of election fraud are a fixture of US elections, but Trump has professionalized the enterprise, making more audacious and systemic claims of election fraud than ever before and coaxing more elected officials to go along with the lies than seemed possible before the Trump era.

Republicans normalized Trump’s false charges by treating them as “legal challenges”. But by declining to acknowledge the election result, Republicans lent weight to the notion that something unusual was afoot apart from Trump’s effort to subvert the popular will, and they held open a months-long window for Trump’s lies to circulate, during which faith in US democracy was damaged.

Political pressure on local elections officials

In healthier times for the US democracy, no one paid much attention to the certification process because it was taken as an article of unexamined faith that the vote was the vote and the only role officials had was to stamp it. Now there is a plain chance that officials might take direction from the White House, the Republican National Committee or someone else instead of voters.

External legal challenges to the certification of state election results

Lawsuits have developed around elections before, but never in US history has an election been followed by a legal battle of the scope mounted by the Trump campaign. Trump, the loser, sued in every state, with multiple lawsuits, where flipping the result could help him win.

The fact that Trump lost basically all the lawsuits might not discourage future presidential campaigns from building a national post-election legal strategy into their victory plan: if you can’t win at the ballot box, try the courts.

Internal political challenges to the certification of state election results

Goaded by Trump, legislators in Pennsylvania asked the Supreme Court to prevent certification by the state of its result. Republican Senate candidates in Georgia demanded that the Republican secretary of state withdraw from the certification there. The Republican Party in Arizona demonstrated extremely shrill behavior, demanding that the election not be certified and even challenging Twitter followers to express their willingness to die to prevent certification.

On the whole, efforts by these state elected officials to respond to Trump’s sudden demand that they overthrow what everyone had previously recognized as a democratic process were half-hearted and ineffectual. But if state elected officials get serious about disrupting the certification process, they might come more prepared in future elections.

The president’s role

Should a president of the United States, after an election, be calling up county election officials in charge of certifying the results? Should a president invite lawmakers weighing an intervention in their state’s certification process for lunch? Should a president call out the mob on Twitter against a local election official or a state secretary of state who has resisted his schemes?

Whatever damage US democracy has sustained in 2020, much of it traces back to the source, to a president who did not see anything wrong in 2019 with coercing a foreign leader to try to take out a political opponent, who made the fealty of state governors a condition of pandemic aid, and who now has twisted the arms of elected officials across the United States in an effort to subvert the will of American voters.

The role that Trump has played in attacking the integrity of the American system is the most outrageous and unprecedented of all the unholy perversions of democracy that 2020 has seen. Whether that role will be replicated or reprised in future White Houses, and in future elections, could make all the difference.
What counts is that he will never win. We the People of the United States are stronger. As we stood on December 8th, 1941, we stand again.
 
Democrat Mass Voter Fraud is an attack on our democracy
Press bias is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the IRS as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the CIA as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the FBI as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the DOJ as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama spying on Trump is a is a threat to our democracy
Democrat hate and racism is a threat to our democracy
Biden taking bribes from China is a threat to our democracy
Hillary taking bribes from everyone is a threat to our democracy
Marxism is a threat to our democracy
Open borders is a threat to our democracy
Progressive Censorship is a threat to our democracy
Progressive Thought Crimes are a threat to our democracy
Such false allegations are a threat to democracy.
 
Five ways Trump has tried to attack democracy post-election

Full article here: After the fact: the five ways Trump has tried to attack democracy post-election

A well written and succinct analysis of how democracy and faith in the US election system has been damaged post-election. In hoping that at least part of the article will be read by Republicans/Conservatives & Democrats/Liberals alike, I have taken the liberty of copying & pasting a large part of it below.

List of five post-election attacks on democracy by Donald Trump and Republicans that were new in 2020 but might haunt elections for years to come.

Especially reckless and sustained election fraud charges


False accusations of election fraud are a fixture of US elections, but Trump has professionalized the enterprise, making more audacious and systemic claims of election fraud than ever before and coaxing more elected officials to go along with the lies than seemed possible before the Trump era.

Republicans normalized Trump’s false charges by treating them as “legal challenges”. But by declining to acknowledge the election result, Republicans lent weight to the notion that something unusual was afoot apart from Trump’s effort to subvert the popular will, and they held open a months-long window for Trump’s lies to circulate, during which faith in US democracy was damaged.

Political pressure on local elections officials

In healthier times for the US democracy, no one paid much attention to the certification process because it was taken as an article of unexamined faith that the vote was the vote and the only role officials had was to stamp it. Now there is a plain chance that officials might take direction from the White House, the Republican National Committee or someone else instead of voters.

External legal challenges to the certification of state election results

Lawsuits have developed around elections before, but never in US history has an election been followed by a legal battle of the scope mounted by the Trump campaign. Trump, the loser, sued in every state, with multiple lawsuits, where flipping the result could help him win.

The fact that Trump lost basically all the lawsuits might not discourage future presidential campaigns from building a national post-election legal strategy into their victory plan: if you can’t win at the ballot box, try the courts.

Internal political challenges to the certification of state election results

Goaded by Trump, legislators in Pennsylvania asked the Supreme Court to prevent certification by the state of its result. Republican Senate candidates in Georgia demanded that the Republican secretary of state withdraw from the certification there. The Republican Party in Arizona demonstrated extremely shrill behavior, demanding that the election not be certified and even challenging Twitter followers to express their willingness to die to prevent certification.

On the whole, efforts by these state elected officials to respond to Trump’s sudden demand that they overthrow what everyone had previously recognized as a democratic process were half-hearted and ineffectual. But if state elected officials get serious about disrupting the certification process, they might come more prepared in future elections.

The president’s role

Should a president of the United States, after an election, be calling up county election officials in charge of certifying the results? Should a president invite lawmakers weighing an intervention in their state’s certification process for lunch? Should a president call out the mob on Twitter against a local election official or a state secretary of state who has resisted his schemes?

Whatever damage US democracy has sustained in 2020, much of it traces back to the source, to a president who did not see anything wrong in 2019 with coercing a foreign leader to try to take out a political opponent, who made the fealty of state governors a condition of pandemic aid, and who now has twisted the arms of elected officials across the United States in an effort to subvert the will of American voters.

The role that Trump has played in attacking the integrity of the American system is the most outrageous and unprecedented of all the unholy perversions of democracy that 2020 has seen. Whether that role will be replicated or reprised in future White Houses, and in future elections, could make all the difference.
Trump forgot to establish permanent welfare.
 
Should a president of the United States, after an election, be calling up county election officials in charge of certifying the results? Should a president invite lawmakers weighing an intervention in their state’s certification process for lunch? Should a president call out the mob on Twitter against a local election official or a state secretary of state who has resisted his schemes?

Coercion and Bribery

A blatant abuse of power
 
And to think that back in 2000, it was all about the hanging chad......Today suitcases full of ballots, voter machines that switched votes, yeah, nothing to see here, move along.

But remember retard, when your gasoline goes back to 4 dollars a gallon and your food costs skyrocket, all you can blame is the fucking morons like you who had to cheat to win...

Well, if it isn’t old Jim from the “No abuse discussion board”. You would post your offensive memes and spew out personal insults and then run off with your tail between your legs when confronted by the site moderators.

I see you haven’t changed… you still think that name calling wins you the argument.
 
Democrat Mass Voter Fraud is an attack on our democracy
Press bias is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the IRS as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the CIA as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the FBI as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the DOJ as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama spying on Trump is a is a threat to our democracy
Democrat hate and racism is a threat to our democracy
Biden taking bribes from China is a threat to our democracy
Hillary taking bribes from everyone is a threat to our democracy
Marxism is a threat to our democracy
Open borders is a threat to our democracy
Progressive Censorship is a threat to our democracy
Progressive Thought Crimes are a threat to our democracy
This fails as a red herring fallacy – the thread is about Trump’s attack on democracy, not Obama.

This post is also made up of lies.

This failed attempt to deflect is of course understandable, given the fact Trump’s corruption and contempt for our democratic institutions cannot be defended.
 
Democrat Mass Voter Fraud is an attack on our democracy
Press bias is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the IRS as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the CIA as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the FBI as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the DOJ as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama spying on Trump is a is a threat to our democracy
Democrat hate and racism is a threat to our democracy
Biden taking bribes from China is a threat to our democracy
Hillary taking bribes from everyone is a threat to our democracy
Marxism is a threat to our democracy
Open borders is a threat to our democracy
Progressive Censorship is a threat to our democracy
Progressive Thought Crimes are a threat to our democracy
Such false allegations are a threat to democracy.
They aren't false
 
Democrat Mass Voter Fraud is an attack on our democracy
Press bias is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the IRS as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the CIA as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the FBI as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the DOJ as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama spying on Trump is a is a threat to our democracy
Democrat hate and racism is a threat to our democracy
Biden taking bribes from China is a threat to our democracy
Hillary taking bribes from everyone is a threat to our democracy
Marxism is a threat to our democracy
Open borders is a threat to our democracy
Progressive Censorship is a threat to our democracy
Progressive Thought Crimes are a threat to our democracy
This fails as a red herring fallacy – the thread is about Trump’s attack on democracy, not Obama.

This post is also made up of lies.

This failed attempt to deflect is of course understandable, given the fact Trump’s corruption and contempt for our democratic institutions cannot be defended.
What corruption? Having contempt for Democrats and the fake news media is not the same thing as having contempt for "democratic insitutions." Although I certainly have contempt for democracy, Trump has never demonstrated any such contempt. Swindling an election is showing contempt for democratic institutions.

Why is it that nothing you post ever has the slightest contact with reality?
 
Democrat Mass Voter Fraud is an attack on our democracy
Press bias is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the IRS as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the CIA as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the FBI as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the DOJ as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama spying on Trump is a is a threat to our democracy
Democrat hate and racism is a threat to our democracy
Biden taking bribes from China is a threat to our democracy
Hillary taking bribes from everyone is a threat to our democracy
Marxism is a threat to our democracy
Open borders is a threat to our democracy
Progressive Censorship is a threat to our democracy
Progressive Thought Crimes are a threat to our democracy
This fails as a red herring fallacy – the thread is about Trump’s attack on democracy, not Obama.

This post is also made up of lies.

This failed attempt to deflect is of course understandable, given the fact Trump’s corruption and contempt for our democratic institutions cannot be defended.
What "attack on democracy?"
 
Five ways Trump has tried to attack democracy post-election

Full article here: After the fact: the five ways Trump has tried to attack democracy post-election

A well written and succinct analysis of how democracy and faith in the US election system has been damaged post-election. In hoping that at least part of the article will be read by Republicans/Conservatives & Democrats/Liberals alike, I have taken the liberty of copying & pasting a large part of it below.

List of five post-election attacks on democracy by Donald Trump and Republicans that were new in 2020 but might haunt elections for years to come.

Especially reckless and sustained election fraud charges


False accusations of election fraud are a fixture of US elections, but Trump has professionalized the enterprise, making more audacious and systemic claims of election fraud than ever before and coaxing more elected officials to go along with the lies than seemed possible before the Trump era.

Republicans normalized Trump’s false charges by treating them as “legal challenges”. But by declining to acknowledge the election result, Republicans lent weight to the notion that something unusual was afoot apart from Trump’s effort to subvert the popular will, and they held open a months-long window for Trump’s lies to circulate, during which faith in US democracy was damaged.

Political pressure on local elections officials

In healthier times for the US democracy, no one paid much attention to the certification process because it was taken as an article of unexamined faith that the vote was the vote and the only role officials had was to stamp it. Now there is a plain chance that officials might take direction from the White House, the Republican National Committee or someone else instead of voters.

External legal challenges to the certification of state election results

Lawsuits have developed around elections before, but never in US history has an election been followed by a legal battle of the scope mounted by the Trump campaign. Trump, the loser, sued in every state, with multiple lawsuits, where flipping the result could help him win.

The fact that Trump lost basically all the lawsuits might not discourage future presidential campaigns from building a national post-election legal strategy into their victory plan: if you can’t win at the ballot box, try the courts.

Internal political challenges to the certification of state election results

Goaded by Trump, legislators in Pennsylvania asked the Supreme Court to prevent certification by the state of its result. Republican Senate candidates in Georgia demanded that the Republican secretary of state withdraw from the certification there. The Republican Party in Arizona demonstrated extremely shrill behavior, demanding that the election not be certified and even challenging Twitter followers to express their willingness to die to prevent certification.

On the whole, efforts by these state elected officials to respond to Trump’s sudden demand that they overthrow what everyone had previously recognized as a democratic process were half-hearted and ineffectual. But if state elected officials get serious about disrupting the certification process, they might come more prepared in future elections.

The president’s role

Should a president of the United States, after an election, be calling up county election officials in charge of certifying the results? Should a president invite lawmakers weighing an intervention in their state’s certification process for lunch? Should a president call out the mob on Twitter against a local election official or a state secretary of state who has resisted his schemes?

Whatever damage US democracy has sustained in 2020, much of it traces back to the source, to a president who did not see anything wrong in 2019 with coercing a foreign leader to try to take out a political opponent, who made the fealty of state governors a condition of pandemic aid, and who now has twisted the arms of elected officials across the United States in an effort to subvert the will of American voters.

The role that Trump has played in attacking the integrity of the American system is the most outrageous and unprecedented of all the unholy perversions of democracy that 2020 has seen. Whether that role will be replicated or reprised in future White Houses, and in future elections, could make all the difference.
What counts is that he will never win. We the People of the United States are stronger. As we stood on December 8th, 1941, we stand again.
You aren't "we the people." You are a servile commie minion who licks the boots of Dim Kommisars.
 
Five ways Trump has tried to attack democracy post-election

Full article here: After the fact: the five ways Trump has tried to attack democracy post-election

A well written and succinct analysis of how democracy and faith in the US election system has been damaged post-election. In hoping that at least part of the article will be read by Republicans/Conservatives & Democrats/Liberals alike, I have taken the liberty of copying & pasting a large part of it below.

List of five post-election attacks on democracy by Donald Trump and Republicans that were new in 2020 but might haunt elections for years to come.

Especially reckless and sustained election fraud charges


False accusations of election fraud are a fixture of US elections, but Trump has professionalized the enterprise, making more audacious and systemic claims of election fraud than ever before and coaxing more elected officials to go along with the lies than seemed possible before the Trump era.

Republicans normalized Trump’s false charges by treating them as “legal challenges”. But by declining to acknowledge the election result, Republicans lent weight to the notion that something unusual was afoot apart from Trump’s effort to subvert the popular will, and they held open a months-long window for Trump’s lies to circulate, during which faith in US democracy was damaged.

Political pressure on local elections officials

In healthier times for the US democracy, no one paid much attention to the certification process because it was taken as an article of unexamined faith that the vote was the vote and the only role officials had was to stamp it. Now there is a plain chance that officials might take direction from the White House, the Republican National Committee or someone else instead of voters.

External legal challenges to the certification of state election results

Lawsuits have developed around elections before, but never in US history has an election been followed by a legal battle of the scope mounted by the Trump campaign. Trump, the loser, sued in every state, with multiple lawsuits, where flipping the result could help him win.

The fact that Trump lost basically all the lawsuits might not discourage future presidential campaigns from building a national post-election legal strategy into their victory plan: if you can’t win at the ballot box, try the courts.

Internal political challenges to the certification of state election results

Goaded by Trump, legislators in Pennsylvania asked the Supreme Court to prevent certification by the state of its result. Republican Senate candidates in Georgia demanded that the Republican secretary of state withdraw from the certification there. The Republican Party in Arizona demonstrated extremely shrill behavior, demanding that the election not be certified and even challenging Twitter followers to express their willingness to die to prevent certification.

On the whole, efforts by these state elected officials to respond to Trump’s sudden demand that they overthrow what everyone had previously recognized as a democratic process were half-hearted and ineffectual. But if state elected officials get serious about disrupting the certification process, they might come more prepared in future elections.

The president’s role

Should a president of the United States, after an election, be calling up county election officials in charge of certifying the results? Should a president invite lawmakers weighing an intervention in their state’s certification process for lunch? Should a president call out the mob on Twitter against a local election official or a state secretary of state who has resisted his schemes?

Whatever damage US democracy has sustained in 2020, much of it traces back to the source, to a president who did not see anything wrong in 2019 with coercing a foreign leader to try to take out a political opponent, who made the fealty of state governors a condition of pandemic aid, and who now has twisted the arms of elected officials across the United States in an effort to subvert the will of American voters.

The role that Trump has played in attacking the integrity of the American system is the most outrageous and unprecedented of all the unholy perversions of democracy that 2020 has seen. Whether that role will be replicated or reprised in future White Houses, and in future elections, could make all the difference.
So stealing an election is what?...what do you call that?....
 
Should a president of the United States, after an election, be calling up county election officials in charge of certifying the results? Should a president invite lawmakers weighing an intervention in their state’s certification process for lunch? Should a president call out the mob on Twitter against a local election official or a state secretary of state who has resisted his schemes?

Coercion and Bribery

A blatant abuse of power
Where's the coercion? Where's the bribery? It's hilarious watching the turds who said Biden was clean as a whistle accusing Trump of bribery.
 
Democrat Mass Voter Fraud is an attack on our democracy
Press bias is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the IRS as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the CIA as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the FBI as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama using the DOJ as a political tool is a threat to our democracy
Obama spying on Trump is a is a threat to our democracy
Democrat hate and racism is a threat to our democracy
Biden taking bribes from China is a threat to our democracy
Hillary taking bribes from everyone is a threat to our democracy
Marxism is a threat to our democracy
Open borders is a threat to our democracy
Progressive Censorship is a threat to our democracy
Progressive Thought Crimes are a threat to our democracy
Such false allegations are a threat to democracy.
which one is false?
 

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