Joe Biden and the Decency Agenda
AdvertisementContinue reading the main storyOpinionSupported byContinue reading the main storyThe Decency AgendaJoe Biden promised to be a president for all Americans. Here’s a way to start.By More
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in ElectionsAdvertisementContinue reading the main storyOpinionSupported byContinue reading the main storyThe Decency AgendaJoe Biden promised to be a president for all Americans. Here’s a way to start.By More
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in ElectionsAdvertisementContinue reading the main storySupported byContinue reading the main storyVenezuela to Vote in an Election the Opposition Calls a CharadeA victory by the party of President Nicolás Maduro is likely to further weaken Juan Guaidó, the opposition leader who launched a bold but ultimately failed bid backed by the U.S. to take power.A campaign billboard looms over downtown Caracas, promoting the Partido Socialista Unido, the political party of the Venezuelan president, Nicolás Maduro.Credit…Adriana Loureiro Fernandez for The New York TimesBy More
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in ElectionsAdvertisementContinue reading the main storyOpinionSupported byContinue reading the main storylettersReaching Out to Trump’s BaseReaders react to a writer’s discouragement after trying to reach across the political divide.Dec. 5, 2020, 12:00 p.m. ET Credit…The New York TimesTo the Editor:“‘Reach Out to Trump Supporters,’ They Said. I Tried,” by Wajahat Ali (Op-Ed, nytimes.com, Nov. 19), is a perfect example of how liberal efforts to reach a conservative population are doomed to failure.Perplexed as to why so many voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 election, Mr. Ali spent four years giving talks to universities, companies and faith-based communities in an attempt to “win over some Trump supporters.”Admirable intent, lousy method. This is exactly the approach rural people are insulted by: intellectuals showing up to tell them what to think. Not only is it condescending, it is also naïve. Take the 90-minute drive to the airport with a retired Trump supporter that Mr. Ali describes, in which “neither of us changed our outlook.” Big surprise!Any progress we make in our fractured country will necessitate years of listening, not an evening lecturing at the lectern. Our problems go back centuries. It will take considerable understanding and relationship building to make progress toward reconciliation. Don’t give up, Mr. Ali, you’ve only just begun.Philip KenneyPortland, Ore.To the Editor:As progressives, we heard regularly in 2016 that we needed to reach out to Trump supporters and try to understand their position after Donald Trump won. Now that Joe Biden has won and Republicans have badly lost the popular vote again, shouldn’t Trump supporters be the ones reaching out trying to understand progressives?David VanSpeybroeckLake Oswego, Ore.To the Editor:I’m a two-time Obama voter and a two-time Trump voter. I’d be happy to chat respectfully with Wajahat Ali about the dynamics of the Trump voter base and help any way I can.It seems lately that no one is having an honest open discussion, and it’s too easy to jump to conclusions about people. All the vitriol in this article really saddens me. If everyone on the left just completely gives up trying to understand 70-plus million people in this country, doesn’t that sound ominous for our future?It is a special kind of hubris to believe that other intelligent beings would reach the same conclusions as you given the same information. There is a lot of nuance here that is not reflected in the current narrative.Matthew RobanserLynden, Wash.To the Editor:Wajahat Ali, recounting a conversation with a Trump supporter, cites “neither of us changed our outlook” as evidence of the futility of reaching out. This might be a sign of failure if the objective of civil discourse is to convert the other to one’s own worldview — a kind of ideological imperialism not unlike a religious missionary. But there’s more to it than that.Of the same conversation Mr. Ali notes that “we made jokes and we shared stories about our families.” In similar situations, I’ve tended to warm to the other person despite our differences. We may well conclude as we began — at odds. But I don’t feel as if we got nowhere. I walk away from good conversations with greater respect for the other person — in part for better understanding why and how they think, but more important for the chance to appreciate our shared humanity.I’m grateful, in this polarized era, to remember that there is more to people than their politics. There will always be difference and misunderstanding. A hallmark of liberal societies like ours is precisely diversity and pluralism. Will our social fabric prove strong enough to live up to this ideal?Brandon WasicskoCharlottesville, Va.To the Editor:Reading Wajahat Ali’s article urging people to stop wasting their time reaching out to Trump voters, I recognized many of the same emotions and frustrations I have experienced. For me Trump voters include siblings and cousins.It’s easy to give up on people because of frustrations. It’s much harder work to find what people really need — and to not give up on them. One brother and a cousin stepped away from President Trump. It’s not impossible to help those who felt unheard and forgotten to believe in themselves and democracy more than a charlatan.Jasmine Marshall ArmstrongMerced, Calif.To the Editor:I applaud Wajahat Ali for reaching out to heartland Trump supporters, but he missed the point. He “assumed” he could win over some of them, but laments that not one “wavered in their support for him.” He says the endeavor was therefore a waste of time, and I agree, but for a very different reason.He set out to proselytize, not to understand how millions of people could see the world so differently than he does. He took a dozen trips to Middle America but does not mention one thing he learned. The idea that he could fly in from the coast for a couple of hours and change the minds of people whose lives he does not know smacks of the elitism that gave rise to Donald Trump.I am reminded of a quote from Daryl Davis, a Black man who has convinced 200 people to leave the K.K.K. through his friendship: “I never set out certain that I would convert anyone. I just wanted to have a conversation and ask, ‘How can you hate me when you don’t even know me?’”Nick CadyCharlottesville, Va.To the Editor:Wajahat Ali strikes a nerve when he says it isn’t worth trying to reach out to Trump supporters. Growing up in the Midwest and often driving across the country, I’ve seen much goodness in America and all kinds of good people. What’s more, we are brought up to be open to different points of view, to try to broaden our understanding of the world.That, however, must be a two-way street. There is no way to reach someone who just shouts you down, who believes his right to do what he wants outweighs everything (and everyone) else, who picks and chooses which rules to accept only by whether or not they are good for him, who doesn’t believe that truth and facts and experience and competence have much value.I no longer believe that it’s my job — or even possible — to reach any meeting of the minds with such people. I believe we simply have to oppose and defeat them so we can be true to who we are, trying to make life better for everyone. Then, perhaps gradually, those people will be willing to walk into a better future with us.Gail GoldeyHarrison, N.Y.To the Editor:How are we to “reach out” to people whose opinions are founded on the likes of birtherism, QAnon and other such absurd conspiracy theories? “Yes, I understand that you believe that Hillary Clinton, Hunter Biden and George Soros stole this election to further their goal of diluting the white race out of existence, and I respect that opinion. Why can’t we just get along?”Mutual understanding requires common ground. It has become increasingly clear that there is none.Stephen ChernicoffBethesda, Md.To the Editor:“‘Reach Out to Trump Supporters,’ They Said. I Tried” embodies the same attitude that gave us a “basket of deplorables.” Wajahat Ali showed up where Trump supporters live, gave a speech to them and decided the effort was not worth it because his audience continued to support President Trump. What if a nice, friendly Trump supporter had showed up where Mr. Ali lives and given a speech to him? Would Mr. Ali have become a Trump supporter?Meeting face to face is a worthwhile first step, and Mr. Ali should be applauded for having taken it. But genuine communication and understanding is a two-way street; you are changed as much as your interlocutor. From his article, it’s clear that genuine communication was not what Mr. Ali was looking for and certainly not what happened. He brought back with him the same elitist attitude that Trump supporters find so maddening.Heather MortonActon, Mass.AdvertisementContinue reading the main story More
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in ElectionsDonald Trump will return to the campaign trail on Saturday – not, notionally at least, in his quixotic and doomed attempt to deny defeat by Joe Biden, but in support of two Republicans who face January run-offs which will decide control of the US Senate.The president and first lady Melania Trump are due to appear in Valdosta, Georgia at 7pm local time.“See you tomorrow night!” Trump tweeted on Friday, as Vice-President Mike Pence stumped in the southern state.But the president couldn’t help tying the Senate race to his baseless accusations of electoral fraud in key states he lost to Biden.“The best way to insure [sic] a … victory,” he wrote, “is to allow signature checks in the presidential race, which will insure [sic] a Georgia presidential win (very few votes are needed, many will be found).“Spirits will soar and everyone will rush out and VOTE!”To the contrary, many observers postulate that Trump’s ceaseless baseless claims that the election was rigged could depress turnout among supporters in Georgia, handing a vital advantage to Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock, the Democratic challengers to senators Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue.If Ossoff and Warnock win, the Senate will be split 50-50, Kamala Harris’s vote as vice-president giving Democrats control. Polling in both races is tight.Trump’s recalcitrance is being encouraged by congressional Republicans. On Saturday the Washington Post reported that only 25 of 247 Republican representatives and senators have acknowledged Biden’s victory.Biden won the electoral college by 306-232, the same result Trump said was a landslide when it landed in his favour over Hillary Clinton. The Democrat is more than 7m ballots ahead in the national popular vote, having attracted the support of more than 81 million Americans, the most of any candidate for president.Democrats performed less well in Senate, House and state elections, however, making the Georgia runoffs vital to the balance of power in Washington as leaders look for agreement on much-needed stimulus and public health measures to tackle the Covid-19 pandemic and its attendant economic downturn.Earlier this week, two lawyers who have both been involved in legal challenges to Biden’s victory and trafficked in outlandish conspiracy theories, Lin Wood and Sidney Powell, told Trump supporters not to vote in Georgia unless Republican leaders act more aggressively to overturn the presidential result.“We’re not gonna go vote 5 January on another machine made by China,” Wood said on Wednesday. “You’re not gonna fool Georgians again. If Kelly Loeffler wants your vote, if David Perdue wants your vote, they’ve got to earn it. They’ve got to demand publicly, repeatedly, consistently, ‘Brian Kemp: call a special session of the Georgia legislature’.“And if they do not do it, if Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue do not do it, they have not earned your vote. Don’t you give it to them. Why would you go back and vote in another rigged election?”After a rush of defeats on Friday, Trump has won one election-related lawsuit and lost 46. But he continues to attack, in Georgia slamming Governor Brian Kemp and secretary of state Brad Raffensperger for overseeing a contest in which the state went Democratic for the first time since 1992.Matt Towery, a former Georgia Republican legislator now an analyst and pollster, told Reuters Trump could help in the state “if he spends most of his time talking about the two candidates, how wonderful they are, what they’ve achieved.“If he talks about them for 10 minutes and spends the rest of the time telling everyone how terrible Brian Kemp is, then it will only exacerbate things.”Gabriel Sterling, the Republican manager of Georgia’s voting systems, this week blamed the president and his allies for threats of violence against election workers and officials. On Friday, he said: “I think the rhetoric they’re engaged in now is literally suppressing the vote.”At a rally in Savannah, the vice-president was greeted by chants of “stop the steal”.“I know we’ve all got our doubts about the last election,” Pence said, “and I actually hear some people saying, ’Just don’t vote.’ My fellow Americans, if you don’t vote, they win.”Kemp and Loeffler missed campaign events on Friday after a young aide to the senator was killed in a car crash.Former president Barack Obama held a virtual event in support of Warnock and Ossoff. From Wilmington, Delaware, where he continues preparations to take power on 20 January, Biden said he would travel to Georgia at some point, to campaign with the Democratic candidates. More
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in ElectionsFor a man obsessed with winning, Donald Trump is losing a lot.In the month since the election, the president and his legal team have come no closer in their frantic efforts to overturn the result, notching up dozens of losses in courts across the country, with more rolling in by the day.According to an Associated Press tally of roughly 50 cases brought by Trump’s campaign and his allies, more than 30 have been rejected or dropped, and about a dozen are awaiting action.The advocacy group Democracy Docket put Trump’s losses even higher, tweeting on Friday that Trump’s team had lost 46 post-election lawsuits following several fresh losses in several states on Friday.Trump has notched just one small victory, a case challenging a decision to move the deadline to provide missing proof of identification for certain absentee ballots and mail-in ballots in Pennsylvania.Five more losses came on Friday. The Trump campaign lost its bid to overturn the results of the election in Nevada and a Michigan appeals court rejected a case from his campaign. The Minnesota supreme court dismissed a challenge brought by GOP lawmakers. And in Arizona, a judge threw out a bid to undo Biden’s victory there, concluding that the state’s Republican party chairwoman failed to prove fraud or misconduct and that the evidence presented at trial wouldn’t reverse Trump’s loss. The Wisconsin supreme court also declined to hear a lawsuit brought by a conservative group over Trump’s loss.Trump’s latest failings came as California certified Joe Biden as the official winner in the state, officially handing him the electoral college majority needed to win the White House. Secretary of State Alex Padilla’s formal approval of the state’s 55 pledged electors brought Biden’s tally so far to 279, according to a count by the Associated Press – just over the 270 threshold needed for victory.The Republican president and his allies continue to mount new cases, recycling the same baseless claims, even after Trump’s own attorney general, William Barr, declared this week that the justice department had uncovered no widespread fraud.“This will continue to be a losing strategy, and in a way it’s even bad for him: he gets to re-lose the election numerous times,“ said Kent Greenfield, a professor at Boston College Law School. “The depths of his petulance and narcissism continue to surprise me.”Trump has refused to admit he lost and this week posted a 46-minute speech to Facebook filled with conspiracy theories, misstatements and vows to keep up his fight to subvert the election.Judges in battleground states have repeatedly swatted down legal challenges brought by the president and his allies. Trump’s legal team has vowed to take one Pennsylvania case to the US supreme court even though it was rejected in a scathing ruling by a federal judge, as well as an appeals court.After recently being kicked off Trump’s legal team, the conservative attorney Sidney Powell filed new lawsuits in Arizona and Wisconsin this week riddled with errors and wild conspiracy claims about election rigging. One of the plaintiffs named in the Wisconsin case said he never agreed to participate in the case and found out through social media that he had been included.In his video posted Wednesday, Trump falsely claimed there were facts and evidence of a mass conspiracy created by Democrats to steal the election, a similar argument made by his lawyer Rudy Giuliani and others before judges, which have been largely unsuccessful.Most of their claims are rooted in conspiracy theories about voting machines, as well as testimony from partisan poll watchers who claimed they didn’t get close enough to see ballots being tallied because of Covid safety precautions.“No, I didn’t hear any facts or evidence,“ tweeted the Pennsylvania attorney general, Josh Shapiro, a Democrat, after watching the video Wednesday night. “What I did hear was a sad Facebook rant from a man who lost an election.” More
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