Democracy is on the ballot in U.S. midterms with ‘conspiracy’ candidates: David Frum
Global News
'The problem is the party that is poised to make these gains is one that is not committed to the democratic system anymore, as much as it ought to be,' David Frum said of midterms.
A strong showing from Republican candidates who believe in conspiracy theories during next week’s United States midterm elections could deepen cracks in the country’s democracy, political commentator David Frum is warning.
His concern comes as multiple candidates in midterm races across the country, “who believe in all kinds of QAnon conspiracy theories,” Frum said, and have supported former U.S. president Donald Trump’s false assertion that the 2020 presidential election was stolen.
“A lot of people who are loyal to president Trump did try, back then, to overturn (the) election,” Frum told Mercedes Stephenson during an interview for The West Block, aired Sunday.
“They didn’t quite have the power to do it. But the results of 2022 mean they may have the power to do it in 2024.”
A number of lower-profile races, he said, have been stacked with candidates who Frum called “pro-Trump weirdos.” They subscribe to these debunked conspiracy theories, he said, and electing these folks is “one of the major goals of pro-Trump Republicans.”
“If the Republicans have a good year in 2022, which it looks like they will, they will elect many, many of these people to run elections in a way … that is aggressively unfair, and that will set aside the will of the voters,” Frum said.
When Americans cast their ballots next week, they will being doing so for the first time since Jan. 6, 2021, when a pro-Trump mob stormed Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C.
With the events of Jan. 6 front of mind, Frum isn’t the only person characterizing the race as a high-stakes battle for democracy. Speaking on Wednesday, U.S. President Joe Biden issued a similar warning.