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Editorial voice from elsewhere
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It’s not just left-leaning voters that Republicans are willing to disenfranchise to maintain power.
Now that challengers to President Donald Trump have begun to emerge from within his own party, at least four states are taking steps to cancel their 2020 GOP primaries and caucuses.
It’s a stunning admission of a) the party’s willingness to subvert basic tenets of democracy; b) the dismissiveness with which the party is willing to treat its own voters; and c) the weakness of the party’s erstwhile leader.
It should also put to rest any doubts that concerted GOP efforts nationwide to purge registration rolls, tighten voting requirements and diminish the number of polling stations have anything whatsoever to do with combating the nonexistent threat of voter fraud. (Nonexistent, that is, everywhere but North Carolina’s 9th Congressional District, where a Republican operative’s vote-rigging shenanigans forced the state to overturn the results of last fall’s election. But we digress.)
Republican party leaders in South Carolina, Kansas, Nevada and Arizona are canceling their 2020 presidential primaries. The move is intended to show support for the president in the wake of several declared or contemplated primary challenges.
Former Massachusetts Gov. William Weld and former Rep. Joe Walsh are already in the race. Former South Carolina governor and congressman Mark Sanford announced his bid Sunday, and former Rep. Mo Brooks also has discussed a run.
All deserve the opportunity to make their case to Republican voters. The days of back-room candidate selections (at least in this brazen a fashion) were supposed to have gone the way of smoke-filled rooms.
State-level party leaders are hearing none of that, however. They may have saddled themselves with a lazy, self-obsessed standard-bearer who’s more interested in petty spats than the public good, but he’s doing their bidding in terms of tax cuts and federal judges. So they’re evidently going to do everything they can to drag him across the finish line.
It’s nothing if not ironic: After whining for much of the 2016 campaign that the election was rigged, Trump sits back while his party rigs the 2020 election in his favor.
His challengers certainly aren’t pleased. “Undemocratic BS,” was Walsh’s pithy and accurate description. “It’s wrong, and that’s the kind of thing that should p- – off Republican voters.”
Yes, it should. Funny thing, though: The number of Republicans – voters, lawmakers, administrators – who have been willing to remain silent while the president and his administration run roughshod over mores, protocols, policies and even laws has been astonishing. From defending dimwitted if harmless misstatements about the path of a hurricane to refusing comment about suspicious changes in international military routes that benefit the president financially, the wagons have been circling furiously.
Trump, on the other hand, is a divisive figure who has done little to reach out beyond his faithful base either within or outside GOP circles. His vision, if he has one, remains a mystery more than two and half years into his presidency. His reckless decisions and insulting comments routinely diminish the office and the nation.
In short, he deserves to be challenged, not protected. He should be required to defend his record and spell out his agenda – not just in a general election, but among challengers within his own party. Registered Republicans deserve to decide on their party’s candidate for the nation’s highest office.
The Republican Party has been demonstrating for years its disregard for fair general elections. Now, they’re taking their “undemocratic BS” one step further. Republican voters should refuse to stand for it.