The Washington Postās latest poll is enough to make the Statue of Liberty cringe.
āIn a new poll, half of Republicans say they would support postponing the 2020 election if Trump proposed it,ā read the headline of the paperās Monkey Cage blog (for election geeks) on Thursday, which quickly reverberated around the internet.
āAccording to a poll conducted by two academic authors andĀ publishedĀ by the Washington Post, 52 percentĀ of Republicans said they would back a postponement ofĀ the next election if Trump called for it,ā TheHill.com quickly reported. āIf Trump and congressional Republicans proposed postponing the election to ensure only eligible citizens could vote, support from Republicans rises to 56 percent.ā
The Hillās summation didnāt stop there, but affirmed that nearly equal numbers of Republicansā47 percentāthink TrumpĀ won the popular vote. And a big majority, 68 percent, āalso thinks millions of illegal immigrants voted in the presidential election and 73 percent think voter fraud happens somewhat or very often.ā
ublicans who believe every one of these assertions are dead wrong. But this sizeable slice of America doesnāt know how uninformed it is and apparently doesnāt care. What donāt they know?
Letās start with postponing the 2020 election. Not having a vote for Congress and the presidency presumably would allow the current regime to remain in power. Right?
No, wrong. The Republican super patriots favoring a possible delay in 2020 are completely unaware of the U.S. Constitutionās 20th Amendment.
The U.S. Constitution, which both the Congress and the president swear to uphold, states that Congress and the president have fixed terms of office with expiration dates. Itās over on January 20Ā for the president, and on January 3Ā for Congress. Thereās no postponing, unless somehow, thereās a 21st-century civil warāor a similar coup.
Digging deeper, the 20th Amendment revised presidential and congressional terms to anticipate that the Electoral Collegeāwhich was created by the 12th Amendment and meets in early Decemberāmight not be able to get a majority to pick the president. In that case, the House of Representatives picks the president. But thereās no postponing the election.
You might think the oh-so-political Washington Post would point this out, but no.
ItĀ says, āPostponing the 2020 presidential election is not something that Trump or anyone in his administration has even hinted at, but for many in his constituency floating such an idea may not be a step too far⦠Nevertheless, we do not believe that these findings can be dismissed out of hand. At a minimum, they show that a substantial number of Republicans are amenable to violations of democratic norms that are more flagrant than what is typically proposed (or studied).ā
The Post does not do any better with voter fraud. This is the Republican fantasy that hoards of Democrats are voting more than once to steal elections everywhere. They use that imaginary menace to impose harsh statewide voting laws that complicate the process for blue populations. Itās hard to know what’s more abhorrentāthe Post giving credence to the GOPās big lie on voter fraud, or majorities of Republicans believing this lie is real.
āClaims of large-scale voter fraud are not true, but that has not stopped a substantial number of Republicans from believing them,ā the Post blogs.
Stop right there: claims of small-scale voter fraud are also not true. It happens less than once in a million votersāwhether those keeping score are liberal civil rights lawyers or right-wingers like the Heritage Foundation that issue fancy reports they file in lawsuits, like this one that cites 492 cases and 733 voting malfeasance-related convictions from 1982 through 2016. Thatās one case for every 2 million presidential election voters from 1984 to 2016 (roughly 980,000,000 votes). Millions more voted in other elections in this period.
Yet the Postās blog gives credence to this fake issue, continuing, āBut how far would Republicans be willing to follow the president to stop what they perceive as rampant fraud? Our recent survey suggests that the answer is quite far: About half of Republicans say they would support postponing the 2020 presidential election until the country can fix this problem.ā
If you think Iām just being snarky, donāt take it from me. Hereās what the New York Times Editorial Board wrote in fall 2016 after another Post poll also found swathes of Americans believe voter fraud is real. āAnother 26 percent of American voters said that fraud ārarelyā occurs, but even that characterization is off the mark. Just 1 percent of respondents gave the answer that comes closest to reality: ‘Never.'”
The Times editorial began, āHow does a lie come to be widely taken as the truth? The answer is disturbingly simple: Repeat it over and over again.ā
This is getting to the heart of the matterānot that mainstream media that should know better, though they shouldāthat Republicans like President Trump knowingly recite lies about voting and voters to play to partisan prejudice and passion. Anyone can look up the fact that Hillary Clinton won 2.9 million more popular votes than Trump.
But what about all those millions of undocumented immigrants repeatedly voting for Democrats using fake identities? That’s another of Trump’s fantasy claims. The Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law went looking. Its survey included the 10 counties with the highest non-citizen populations in America, and found āfewer than 10 [non-citizen] votesā cited by local election official.
Yet 68 percent of Republicans think millions of illegal immigrants voted, 73 percent of Republicans think voter fraud happens often or a lot, and half would be fine with putting off the next presidential election if Trump and Congress wanted to.
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