Question: "Who won the 2020 election?"
Answer: "Ma'am, we know that President Joe Biden was sworn into office."
The scene was the Senate confirmation hearing of Sen. Markwayne Mullin (R-OK), nominee for secretary of homeland security. The question came from Senator Elissa Slotkin (D-MI).
To be a Republican in good standing, one needs to ignore evidence that would normally be dispositive. The 2020 votes came in just as predicted by a variety of polling firms, including the Republican-oriented Fox and Rasmussen polls. Votes for representatives and senators, for governors, for down-ballot races, all conformed to a pattern of a 2020 blue wave in jurisdiction after jurisdiction, red states, blue states, states with Republican election officials, states with Democratic election officials. Counts and recounts, many done by Republicans, confirmed the votes. Joe Biden received some 81 million votes to Trump's 74 million.
The Biden-was-inaugurated line is a way to assert that the issue is past and gone. It isn't past. It is a litmus test of political loyalty and character. It exposes people who cannot be trusted to do their duty regarding democratic elections. It shows that the Republican is willing to tread the party line if he is put under political pressure by his party. He would suspend belief in audited and recounted ballots not to acknowledge the election of a Democrat.
Trump is already supplying the excuses for Republicans to use to deny the midterm election results: There may be mailed ballots, the wrong people may have voted, machines may have switched votes, or the votes may be reported inaccurately by election officials. A Republican who uses the Biden-was-inaugurated line demonstrates that he cannot openly acknowledge an election victory by a Democrat, if that is demanded by his party.
There are multiple choke points and veto spots in our election machinery. Legislators will be put on the hot seat and urged to refuse to do routine ministerial acts. I have observed Oregon's state Senate races in my district, District Three, a seat currently held by Democrat Jeff Golden (yet another college classmate). It is a light blue district, but one that elected a strong Republican candidate in the past, Alan DeBoer. Recent Republican candidates have lost elections to Golden because he was a well-respected candidate and because his Republican opponents sabotaged their own campaigns. They could not resist the million-dollar-plus campaign help from the state Republican Party, which served up red-meat Republican orthodoxy.
This cycle's Republican candidate for this district, Brad Hicks, was a career Chamber of Commerce executive director. He is well connected to the local business establishment -- a mixed blessing. (Forty-five years ago I won election as a Democratic county commissioner because I advertised that I was NOT part of that good ol' boy network of businesses getting government contracts from the very people whose campaigns they fund. I was the "drain the swamp" candidate.) Hicks could be a plausible candidate, but he is stuck with being neck-deep in the swamp and a member of a party that cannot admit that their leader lost an election. If elected, Republicans in the state Senate would be under enormous pressure to deny certification of any election victory by Democrats if Trump demands it. They have a ready-made excuse for mischief: We have mail-in ballots in Oregon.
It is not easy to be a Republican in this era of Trump. They cannot escape Trump being Trump, with all his strangeness, and all his MAGA supporters. Trump and the GOP demand compliance and they are harsh on heretics.
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