Changing the Guard
Changing The Guard
"We are increasingly anxious that this country is headed toward the worst post-election crisis in a century and a half.""Our biggest concern is that disputed presidential election -- especially if there are close contests in a few swing states, or if one candidate denounces the legitimacy of the process -- could generate violence and bloodshed.""We do not pull this alarm lightly."Larry Diamond, senior fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University"The ingredients for unrest are present.""And most importantly, President Donald Trump, whose toxic rhetoric and willingness to court conflict to advance his personal interests have no precedent in modern U.S. history.""The country faces an unfamiliar danger. While Americans have grown used to a certain level of rancour in these quadrennial campaigns, they have not in living memory faced the realistic prospect that the incumbent may reject the outcome or that armed violence may result."Report: The International Crisis Group
After
a Trump supporter was killed in Portland last month, the leader of a
far-right-wing militia group called others to rally with him: "Civil war is here, right now". And more recently, on the very day of the Presidential election Tuesday, an Antifa activist tweeted: "The best way to stop a racist with a gun is an anti-racist with a gun. Because they're not gonna stop having guns".
And that seems to sum up the suspicion, fear and hatred that is
consuming America between the left and the right, each convinced the
other is out to slaughter them, and each prepared to meet the challenge
in a polarized nation.
And
while they detest one another, threaten and malign one another, prepare
to meet in mortal combat to settle their differences, they can always
find the root cause of their disaffection in the presence of the world's
everlasting public enemy number one and in Grand Rapids, Michigan that
enemy was placed on warning alert. A century-old Jewish cemetery in
Michigan was vandalized. "Trump" and "MAGA" painted in flaming red on tombstones just before the president visited the city in his final campaign rally.
Precautions
have been taken to make it as difficult as conceivably possible for
rioters and those who view protests as the perfect opportunity to run
amok destroying, looting, and violently confronting those in their way.
Before election day dawned a "non-scalable" fence was erected about the
perimeter of the White House, constructed during the night, anticipating
civil unrest the following day. That day, however, voters did their
electoral duty, lining up at the polls and voting as though their lives
depended on it. Orderly, determined and peaceful.
In
Washington, however, storefronts were boarded over and federal
buildings; the Treasury Department and others were fenced in. Officers
were called in by the D.C. Police along with riot equipment assembled to
confront an expected reaction "regardless of who wins",
the chief of police said. Students at George Washington University were
cautioned to stock up on food and medication to last a week. As in
battening down the hatches for an expected challenge to civil society.
The
risk is that the tension consuming the population through political
polarization in which the fraught issues of racial identity and economic
equality are intertwined is on the boil. The stress and anticipation of
an election result that will antagonize fifty percent of the population
while causing jubilation in the other fifty percent give a point or two
in a highly contested and uncertain race for the White House has
highlighted an aura of expectation and uncertainty that has served to
vulcanize opposing positions.
A
record high 64 percent of voters were found through a final
pre-election poll to be fearful of what would happen should their
candidate lose; an emotional uncertainty shared almost equally by
supporters of both President Trump and his challenger Joe Biden. Fully
77 percent of those polled felt the stakes involved to be steeper in
2020 than any previous election. In its end-of-campaign polling, Pew
Research found only half of Trump supporters expressed confidence the
election would take place without skulduggery.
Malike Sidibe for TIME
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It
is clear from previous Pew studies that the animosity level in the
United States between Republican voters and Democrats runs deeper and
more personal than it ever has; described as mutual "loathing", where 55
percent of Republicans claimed Democrats are "more immoral" than other
Americans, and conversely 47 percent of Democrats claim the same of
Republicans. Results which suggest that even should the election take
place absent nightmare scenarios, the jaded and partisan country will be
more difficult to govern.
Racial
injustice, broad public protests, amplified by social media, and the
final portion of the trifecta, the deadly, ruinous pandemic all
conspired to increase political and social unrest this fateful year of
2020. All these events served to exacerbate the divide, deepening it and
making it more dangerous, and none of these deep, divisive concerns
will evaporate with the eventual results of the election.
Labels: U.S. Presidential Election
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