On Tuesday, President Donald Trump’s loyal attorney general, Bill Barr, said he has “not seen fraud on a scale that could have effected a different outcome in the election.”
If this is going to be yet another test of the GOP’s integrity, it’s probably best to keep your optimism in check.
This would have been disastrous for Trump if facts actually mattered. Fortunately for the president, the grievance movement he is building rests more on raw belief than any actual evidence that would hold up in a court of law.
Cults, after all, are built and sustained on faith, not data.
On cue, much of Trump’s supporters denounced the attorney general. Lou Dobbs of the Fox Business Network lashed out at Barr, saying he is “either a liar or a fool,” while other Trump-friendly media outlets labelled the one-time loyalist “just another card-carrying swamp rat.”
Why did President Trump fill his Cabinet with so many “swamp rats?” https://t.co/FxmWph8zEG
— Frank Luntz (@FrankLuntz) December 1, 2020
None of this is especially surprising, since actual evidence of fraud is beside the point for much of Trump’s base. They simply cannot believe that it is possible that he lost. “Does anyone believe that Biden got 15 million more votes than Obama in 2012?” Eric Trump tweeted. “This from a candidate who would go days/weeks while hardly campaigning.”
Does anyone believe that Biden got 15 million more votes than Obama in 2012? This from a candidate who would go days/weeks while hardly campaigning.
— Eric Trump (@EricTrump) November 28, 2020
In the pro-Trump publication “American Greatness,” the theft of the election is treated as a matter of uncontestable fact. “The question is not whether the Democrats tried to steal the election; they did,” writes author Bruce Bawer. “At this point, there’s no honest question about that. The only question is whether there’s enough time to prove it in court, and whether the judges involved will dare to make honest rulings.”
The conservative website RedState published a piece that stated “without a doubt, this election was stolen,” based on “circumstantial evidence.”
“The enthusiasm for the Trump team seemed insurmountable,”’ the author insists. “There is no way Biden and Harris jumped over that by holding rallies for 10 people at a time. I’ll die on that hill.”
This would have been disastrous for Trump if facts actually mattered.
For Republicans, the long nightmare of Trump is not even close to being over. Despite his defeat, it seems increasingly likely that Trump will continue to hold the GOP hostage, insisting that they continue to support his claim that the election was stolen from him.
In the days immediately after the vote, some Republicans told themselves that there was no harm in indulging Trump, because, surely, he would eventually come around. But far from psychologically adapting to his defeat, Trump has used the last month to launch a multifront attack on the election. And despite his serial legal defeats in court, he and his supporters have escalated their rhetoric about conspiracies, rigged machines, communist plots to overthrow the government, and rampant fraud. He has also continued to raise massive amounts of money to combat the “theft” of the election.
Some Republicans are reportedly “quietly rattled” that Trump’s false claims could hurt turnout in the Jan. 5 runoffs in Georgia that will determine control of the Senate. But the fallout will last far longer.
Even after he leaves office, Trump’s lies about the election are likely to be a litmus test for the GOP. Trump has already threatened primary challenges against governors who have followed the law and certified election results. He has denounced Georgia’s Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger as an “enemy of the people.”
Indeed, Trump’s insistence that he was stabbed in the back could shape right-wing politics for decades. In the short term, there is no longer any easy exit strategy for Republicans. Trump’s denialism won’t end with the certification of the state votes; it won’t end with the counting of the Electoral College votes; and it won’t end on Jan. 20 with his departure from the White House.









