Can Biden Heal America when Trump and his Allies Don’t Want it Healed?
By Robert Reich
In case you missed the news, Joe Biden was elected president of the United States. With almost all ballots counted, Biden has over 75 million votes and Trump some 71 million. The Electoral College isn’t even close.
But
Trump still has not conceded and some leading Republicans say he shouldn’t.
Senator
Lindsey Graham warned on Sunday that Trump shouldn’t concede because “if
Republicans don’t challenge and change the U.S. election system, there will
never be another Republican president elected again.”
In
other words, despite zero evidence of voter fraud, the GOP should attack the
outcome of the election because a Democrat was elected president.
The
nation was already divided when Trump became president. But Trump exploited our
divisions to gain and try to keep power. He didn’t just pour salt into our
wounds. He planted grenades in them.
And
now he and his enablers appear willing to pull the pins.
Elections
usually end with losing candidates congratulating winners and graciously
accepting defeat. They thereby demonstrate their commitment to the democratic
system over the particular outcome they fought to achieve.
Apparently
there will be no graciousness from Trump and his allies, and no concession from
Trump.
They
don’t want America to heal. Evidently, they are not committed to the democratic
system. They’d prefer continuous warfare because that’s the only way they think
they can win.
It’s
a nearly treasonous act: Destroy public trust in the system in order to retain
power.
Although Americans have strongly disagreed over what we want the government to do, we have agreed to be bound by the outcomes of our elections. This meta-agreement has required enough trust for us to regard the views and interests of those we disagree with as equally worthy of consideration as our own.
But
Trump and his allies have continuously sacrificed that trust for partisan ends.
And it looks like they won’t stop until they’ve destroyed whatever trust
remains.
Trump
will be president for another three months. He is already mounting legal
challenges and demanding recounts, maneuvers that could prevent states from
meeting the legal deadline of December 8 for choosing electors.
If
this continues, America could find itself in a situation similar to what it
faced in 1876 when claims about ballot fraud forced a special electoral
commission to decide the winner, just two days before the inauguration.
I
wouldn’t be surprised if Trump, Graham, and Trump’s other Republican allies
refuse to attend Biden’s inauguration. Maybe Trump stages a giant rally
for himself instead, and Lindsey Graham introduces him as the “real” president.
Trump sends firestorms of aggrieved messages to his followers – questioning
Biden’s legitimacy as president and urging that they refuse to recognize his
presidency.
This
is followed by months of Trump rallies and tweets containing even more
outlandish charges: plots against him and America by Biden, Nancy Pelosi,
“deep-state” bureaucrats, “socialists,” immigrants, Muslims, or any other of
his standard foes.
It
could go on like this for years. Trump thereby keeps the nation’s attention
focused on himself, remains the center of controversy and divisiveness, and
makes it harder for Biden to heal the nation. Meanwhile, Lindsey Graham
and his ilk keep millions of Republican voters in a state of perpetual fury
leading up to the midterm elections of 2022 and the presidential election in
2024.
Now
is the time for other Republican leaders to exercise true leadership and ask
the nation to unify behind Biden.
Former
President George W. Bush made a start. At the same time Graham was warning
Trump not to concede, Bush phoned Biden to congratulate him, saying the race
was “fundamentally fair” and “its outcome is clear.” In a subsequent statement
Bush added, “I know Joe Biden to be a good man, who has won the opportunity to
lead and unify our country.”
Kudos
to Bush.
The
media (including Twitter, Facebook, and even Fox News) can also help. They have
already begun to call out Trump’s lies in real time and cut off his press
conferences, practices that should have started years ago. They should continue
to tag his lies and those of his allies, and ignore their baseless claims.
It
would be a fitting end to a reality-TV president who has tried to turn America
into a reality warzone.
Robert Reich's latest book is "THE SYSTEM: Who Rigged
It, How To Fix It," out March 24.
He is Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the
University of California at Berkeley and Senior Fellow at the Blum Center. He
served as Secretary of Labor in the Clinton administration, for which Time
Magazine named him one of the 10 most effective cabinet secretaries of the
twentieth century. He has written 17 other books, including the best sellers
"Aftershock,""The Work of Nations," "Beyond Outrage,"
and "The Common Good." He is a founding editor of the American
Prospect magazine, founder of Inequality Media, a member of the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences, and co-creator of the award-winning documentaries
"Inequality For All," and "Saving Capitalism," both now
streaming on Netflix.