Friends,
Coming into
the home stretch before the 2022 midterm elections, I feel different than I've
felt in the days before every election I've witnessed or participated in over
the last three-quarters of a century.
Before, I've
worried about Republicans taking over and implementing their policy
preferences—against political rights in the dark days of Joe McCarthy's
communist witch hunt in the early 1950s, against civil rights in the late 1950s
and early 1960s, against Medicare in the mid-1960s, for smaller government in
the 1970s, for tax cuts for the rich in the 1980s, for a balanced budget in the
early 1990s, against universal health care in the late 1990s and early 2000s,
against LGBTQ rights in the 2010s.
My friends,
we owe it to generations before us who fought and died for democracy and the
rule of law, and to generations after us who will live with the legacy, we
leave them.
Today I'm not
worried about Republicans' policy preferences. Today I'm
worried about the survival of our democracy.
I'm worried
that a majority of Republican candidates are telling voters, without any basis
in fact, that the 2020 election was stolen from Trump.
I'm worried
that if elected, many of these Republicans will make it harder to conduct
elections, allow or encourage endless audits of election results, and even
refuse to sign off on them.
I'm worried
that Republicans have been spending millions to recruit partisan poll workers
and watchers who could disrupt the counting process or raise false claims about
it. (Michigan Republican secretary of state nominee Kristina Karamo rose to
prominence as a Detroit poll watcher who made false claims about election
fraud.)
I'm worried
that thousands of Trump supporters have been calling their local election
offices requesting all kinds of public records, often using suspiciously
similar wording, leading election officials to believe this is a coordinated
effort to prevent them from holding an election.
I'm worried
that violent thugs are on the prowl, and that Republican leaders—starting with
Trump—have been quietly encouraging them. (Speaking on a conservative radio
talk show on Tuesday, Trump amplified a
conspiracy theory about the grisly attack on Speaker Nancy Pelosi's husband,
Paul Pelosi, saying "Weird things going on in that household in the last
couple of weeks." Other Republican candidates are joining in this cruel,
baseless, disgusting taunt.
Most of all,
I'm worried that Americans are losing the trust that a democracy needs in order
to function—trust that even though we may not like the outcomes of particular
elections, we feel bound by them because we trust the democratic process.
The biggest
question hanging over the 2022 midterm election is not a policy. It's not even
an issue.
It is
analogous to the question we as a nation faced in 1860, as we slid into a
tragic Civil War.
It is whether
our democracy can endure.
The
extraordinary, abominable challenge we now face—one that I frankly never
imagined we would face—is that the Republican Party and its enablers in the
media and among the monied interests appear not to want American democracy to
endure.
As Joe Biden
said last night,
"Democracy itself" is at stake in the upcoming election, and he
appealed "to all Americans, regardless of party, to meet this moment of
national and generational importance."
Indeed.
My friends,
we owe it to generations before us who fought and died for democracy and the
rule of law, and to generations after us who will live with the legacy we leave
them—to get out the vote next Tuesday,
to vote out the traitors and liars, to renounce the party that has forsaken the
precious ideal of self-government, and to vote in people who are dedicated to
making our democracy stronger and better.
-Robert Reich
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