Warning: January 6 Was Not A One-Time Event
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Doyle McManus Nine months ago, when followers of President Donald Trump stormed the Capitol to halt the election of Joe Biden, the insurrection appeared to...
Doyle McManusNine months ago, when followers of President Donald Trump stormed the Capitol to halt the election of Joe Biden, the insurrection appeared to be the work of an extremist fringe led by right-wing militias and pro-Trump zealots.But election denialism, the movement that spawned the uprising, has turned out to be much larger, more durable and every bit as worrisome as the violence of Jan. 6.Stoked relentlessly by Trump, the belief that Biden stole the election has become a tenet of faith for most Republican voters.In fact, Biden won the election decisively â whether measured by the popular vote (where his margin was a healthy 7 million) or by electoral votes (where he won by the same majority Trump did four years before). It was not a close election.Since Election Day, more evidence has proved that Trumpâs claims of fraud are groundless. The former presidentâs lawyers filed 65 lawsuits to challenge the results and lost 64. (The single win wasnât about fraud; it was a suit to stop Pennsylvania from letting voters correct errors on mail-in ballots.)Last month, a shambolic GOP âauditâ of votes in Arizonaâs largest county found that Biden actually won more votes than had initially been counted.None of that has stopped Trump from continuing to proclaim his spurious gospel of fraud.âWe won on the Arizona forensic audit yesterday at a level that you wouldnât believe,â he told supporters in Georgia. â[Biden] didnât win in Arizona; he lost.âBiden won Arizona by more than 10,000 votes.Unfortunately, the former presidentâs disinformation campaign is succeeding â at least among the voters and donors he will need if he runs again.And itâs making violence around future elections more likely.A CNN poll last month found that 78% of Republicans say Biden lost the election. Almost 6 in 10 said âbelieving that Donald Trump won the 2020 electionâ is an important part of being Republican â right up there with low taxes and limited government.Another survey, the Economist/YouGov poll, found that election denialism has been growing. In January, only 33% of Republicans said Biden won the presidency âlegitimatelyâ; last month, it was down to 26%.Itâs tempting to consider this merely more evidence of what psychologists call âmotivated reasoning,â the tendency to believe only those facts (in this case, imaginary facts) that conform with your partisan views.But itâs more dangerous than that. It means a Jan. 6-style insurgency could happen again.âAbout 65 million Americans believe that Joe Biden stole the election and is an illegitimate president,â Robert A. Pape, a terrorism expert at the University of Chicago, told me last week. âThatâs a lot of people.âOf those 65 million, he added, about 21 million believe violence is justified to restore Trump to the presidency, based on polling conducted by Papeâs Chicago Project on Security and Threats. That number, he said, âis the pool of potential recruitsâ for a future insurrection.âWe know that only a small fraction of people who say they are willing to engage in violence will ultimately do so,â he added. âSo the size of the pool is important.âThink about this as if it were a wildfire. Wildfires are often set off by lightning strikes, but there will always be lightning. The important question is how much dry wood is on the ground when it strikes. The tinder is more important than the match.âIn other words, the growing pool of election denialists is like a thickening layer of dry wood on a forest floor.One more finding from Papeâs research: Most of the rioters arrested after the Jan. 6 insurrection arenât militia members or marginal cranks.âMore than half are business owners, executives or white-collar professionals â doctors, lawyers, accountants,â he said. âOnly 14% are members of militia groups, which means almost 90% are not. This is more a mainstream set of people than a fringe.âIf Republicans lose any close congressional elections in 2022, or if Trump or any other GOP candidate loses the presidential race in 2024, a large pool of voters is primed to believe the only explanation must be fraud â and some are willing to resort to violence to reverse the result.Americans once saw Election Day as an occasion that bound the nation together, the culmination of a peaceful competition that ended with a graceful concession speech from the loser â an essential declaration of faith in the democratic system.Trump still hasnât conceded the 2020 race.Thanks to him and his abettors, our next few elections will be dangerous opportunities for turmoil, instability â even, perhaps, another insurrection. It may not come in the same shape as Jan. 6; the Capitol Police may be better prepared next time. But Trumpâs disinformation campaign isnât a victimless crime. It has already made post-election violence more likely.(Doyle McManus is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times.)