I thought you might be amused (or infuriated, depending) on the editors’ of the Wall Street Journal’s reaction to President Biden’s pre-midterm plea to save democracy. It takes the form of “missing pages” from the president’s address:
“My fellow Americans, I’ve mentioned the MAGA threat. But to preserve democracy, it will take the efforts and honesty of both political parties. And we Democrats need to acknowledge that most Republicans feel as strongly and sincerely about fair elections as we do. After the 2020 election, hundreds of Republicans were the most important obstacle to Trump’s false claims of a stolen election.
“Mike Pence in particular played a heroic role in refusing as Vice President to stop the Electoral College count. He was under enormous pressure from Donald Trump to do so, and he knew that refusing would jeopardize his chances of ever becoming President. But he stood on principle and followed the Constitution. I should thank him more often than I have, and I want to salute him tonight.
“There were also the many lawyers in the White House and Justice Department who refused to go along with the former President’s claims when they saw no evidence for them. Thank you, Bill Barr.
“There were Governors and state election officials who refused to follow Trump’s demand to find votes that didn’t exist. Thank you, Doug Ducey and Mark Brnovich.
“There were the many judges appointed by Donald Trump who examined the evidence and ruled against the fraud claims. Thank you, Mitch McConnell and Federalist Society for supporting those judges.
“Truth be told, some in my own Democratic Party have also contributed to the climate of political mistrust and animus. The ranks of election deniers include Georgia’s Democratic candidate for Governor Stacey Abrams, who refused to accept her defeat in 2018. My own press secretary, Karine Jean-Pierre, tweeted in 2020 that Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp ‘stole the gubernatorial election from Georgians and Stacey Abrams.’
“That was wrong, and I’ve asked Karine to apologize at her next press conference. I know she regrets that tweet.
“Worst of all, Hillary Clinton and many others claimed Donald Trump’s victory in 2016 was illegitimate and the result of Russian influence. Some in the FBI even lied to a secret surveillance court to spy on a Trump campaign official. That was wrong, and those lies have made it easier for Trump to exploit fears about a politicized ‘deep state,’ as MAGA Republicans call it. I hope that Secretary Clinton will also acknowledge the damage from those versions of the Big Lie.
“Democracy is too important to have a double standard for election denial. And from now on, including next week, I promise to call out members of my own party if they refuse to recognize they have lost an election after all the votes have been counted and confirmed.
“I also can’t absolve myself for sowing doubts about democracy. In my first year as President I referred to election changes being considered in Georgia as ‘Jim Crow 2.0,’ and I said the midterm election would be ‘illegitimate’ if laws like that passed.
“Well, the Georgia law did pass, and it looks on the evidence so far that voter turnout in Georgia will set midterm records. I was wrong to use such divisive language, and especially to invoke the shameful era of government racial segregation, to make a partisan point.â€
and they conclude:
We’d like to think Mr. Biden meant to include these missing pages in his speech. If they weren’t dropped accidentally, then perhaps he could include them next time. Otherwise his speeches about democracy will be dismissed as cynical and calculating partisanship.
My own take is somewhat different. I think that Democrats and Republicans differ in their definitions of “democracy”. I don’t think that either of them mean the same thing as I do.
The problem is that he also enabled Trump. But, he did stand up at a crucial moment.
The problem is that they also enabled Trump. But, they did stand up at a crucial moment.
Apples and oranges. Abrams complained, rightly, about efforts to make it harder for minorities to vote. The election was under control of a Republican who was also standing for election.
Not only did Russia interfere in the election, but the Trump campaign welcomed their help. Nonetheless, Clinton conceded the day after election day.
If you make it harder for minorities to vote, even if they overcome those obstacles, it doesn’t mean that those obstacles don’t entail an inherent bias.
Democracy means each voter should have as much a right to a say in the direction of the country as anyone else. Lying about the balloting process intentionally undermines democracy. Making true claims about inherent biases in the electoral system can help make the system more democratic. Other than that, they’re the same.