US faces spectre of violence post 2024 polls if Trump loses again to Joe Biden in projected re-match
- January 04, 2024
- Updated: 11:29 pm
Washington, Jan 4 (IANS) The US is
bracing itself for a major law and order problem post the Presidential
elections this November, should the projected re-match between Joe Biden
and Donald Trump result in a loss for the latter once again as his
supporters still hold onto the belief that 2020 elections were stolen and
will continue to do so in 2024, if the same result is repeated.
Supporters of the ex-President Trump − who accept his unsubstantiated
claims that the 2020 election was fraudulent − are prepared to believe
those allegations again in 2024, setting the stage for protests and worse
if the former P:resident runs and loses in November, media reports said .
Trump supporters and GOP voters still hold a deep lack of faith in
integrity of the voting processes and electoral administration and on the
flip side, a section of American voters fear threats to America's
democracy, an exclusive USA TODAY/Suffolk University Poll shows on the
third anniversary of the January 6 Capitol riot.
Doubts and fraud claims among Trump supporters spiked the 2020 election
results and the country could well be headed for a repeat of that as Trump
has already said several times that he would repeat the claim of elections
being stolen if he lost again in 2024.
Those doubts in 2020 culminated in violence as Trump allegedly instigated
his supporters to march to Capitol and stop the announcement of Biden being
elected as the President and the motley group of Three Percenters, Proud
Boys, and Oath Keepers went on the rampage, scaling walls of the Congress
building with sticks and weapons endangering the lives of Senators and then
Vice President Mike Pence.
On the third anniversary of the January 6 Capitol riot, an exclusive USA
TODAY/Suffolk University Poll shows not only a deeply held lack of faith in
election integrity among GOP voters but also fears among voters across the
political spectrum about threats to America's democracy.
The poll found a 52 per cent majority of Trump supporters said they had no
confidence that the results of the 2024 election would be accurately
counted and reported. Just 7 per cent expressed high confidence that they
would be.
In contrast, 81 per cent of supporters of President Biden were "very
confident" about this year's election returns; just 3 per cent were "not
confident." Another 15 per cent of Biden voters and 38 per cent of Trump
voters were "somewhat" confident.
The findings highlight the deep political schism and an equally deep
scepticism among Trump supporters about whether this year's election
results could be trusted and should be accepted − some of the same
attitudes that in 2021 fuelled the nation's most serious insurrection since
the Civil War, as per the poll findings.
"I think that there's a great risk of fraud − not that any ballots would be
fraudulent, but that the methods of which they attain them could be and
that the people who receive them are not actually the people who they are
for," said Jake Weber, 24, a contractor for General Motors from Clawson,
Michigan, who was called in the poll. A political independent who leans to
the GOP, he plans to vote for Trump.
"I believe that there's enough checks and balances...I don't have major
concerns" about whether the 2024 election will be fair, said Michelle Derr,
55, a Democrat and small-business owner from Alexandria, Virginia, who
plans to vote for Biden. But she added that "democracy as a whole" was
being tested. "I think that we as a country can get through it, but I think
it's not without effort."
Trump's voters have persisted with the view that the 2020 presidential
election was "rigged" as the former President has drilled it into them
through his social media platforms and speeches at rallies continuously for
the last three years even as congressional committees and judges found
those charges to be baseless.
Trump, on the other hand, faces 91 counts of felony that includes a civil
tax fraud trial case in New York and charges of conspiracy and racketeering
under the RICO act in four jurisdictions including DC and Georgia for
election subversion. Despite these cases, Trump supporters hold onto the
belief that he is not guilty as he professes and that the elections were
stolen and his acts were in pursuance of his duty as a President as Trump
claims, reports said.
Doubts have persisted even after reviews by election officials and state
legislatures across the country have consistently concluded that
allegations of widespread miscounts, misconduct, stuffed ballot boxes and
ineligible voters were unsubstantiated and without any merit, media reports
said .
More than 60 cases brought by Trump and his allies seeking to overturn the
results have been defeated in federal and state courts. Those decisions
were handed down by both Democratic-appointed and Republican-appointed
judges, including federal judges who were appointed by Trump.
But in the poll, two-thirds (67 per cent) of those supporting Trump said
they didn't believe Biden had been legitimately elected in 2020, a debunked
assertion that Trump has continued to trumpet at rallies and on social
media. That view has little traction among other voters: 98 per cent of
those supporting Biden and 82 per cent of those supporting a third party
said he was legitimately elected.
In the survey, Trump edged ahead of Biden 39 per cent to 37 per cent, with
17 per cent planning to vote for an unnamed third-party candidate. The poll
of 1,000 registered voters, taken December 26-29 by landline and cell
phone, has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points.
The continued turbulence and debate over the last election has stoked
concern about the next one and those that would follow. An overwhelming 83
per cent of those surveyed said they worried about democracy. Half of
Americans said they worried "a great deal".
That alarm however is not a reflection of a national consensus. Both sides
on a partisan divide blame each other for imperilling democracy. Forty per
cent (mostly Republicans) said Democrats were chiefly responsible for the
threat; another 40 per cent (mostly Democrats) said Republicans were.
In response to an open-ended question about what specific threat worries
them, the most frequent answer was Trump, cited by 18 per cent. Another 10
per cent named governmental corruption and dysfunction.
"Democrats/liberals/progressives" were cited by 7 per cent, and "MAGA/Trump
followers" by 3 per cent and "Republicans/conservatives" by another 3 per
cent. / IANS
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[tags Big,] Washington, Jan 4 (IANS) The US is bracing itself for a major law and order problem post the Presidential elections this November, should the projected re-match between Joe Biden and Donald Trump result in a loss for the latter once again as his supporters still hold onto the belief that 2020 elections were stolen and will continue to do so in 2024, if the same result is repeated.Supporters of the ex-President Trump − who accept his unsubstantiated claims that the 2020 election was fraudulent − are prepared to believe those allegations again in 2024, setting the stage for protests and worse if the former P:resident runs and loses in November, media reports said .
Trump supporters and GOP voters still hold a deep lack of faith in integrity of the voting processes and electoral administration and on the flip side, a section of American voters fear threats to America's democracy, an exclusive USA TODAY/Suffolk University Poll shows on the third anniversary of the January 6 Capitol riot.
Doubts and fraud claims among Trump supporters spiked the 2020 election results and the country could well be headed for a repeat of that as Trump has already said several times that he would repeat the claim of elections being stolen if he lost again in 2024.
Those doubts in 2020 culminated in violence as Trump allegedly instigated his supporters to march to Capitol and stop the announcement of Biden being elected as the President and the motley group of Three Percenters, Proud Boys, and Oath Keepers went on the rampage, scaling walls of the Congress building with sticks and weapons endangering the lives of Senators and then Vice President Mike Pence.
On the third anniversary of the January 6 Capitol riot, an exclusive USA TODAY/Suffolk University Poll shows not only a deeply held lack of faith in election integrity among GOP voters but also fears among voters across the political spectrum about threats to America's democracy.
The poll found a 52 per cent majority of Trump supporters said they had no confidence that the results of the 2024 election would be accurately counted and reported. Just 7 per cent expressed high confidence that they would be.
In contrast, 81 per cent of supporters of President Biden were "very confident" about this year's election returns; just 3 per cent were "not confident." Another 15 per cent of Biden voters and 38 per cent of Trump voters were "somewhat" confident.
The findings highlight the deep political schism and an equally deep scepticism among Trump supporters about whether this year's election results could be trusted and should be accepted − some of the same attitudes that in 2021 fuelled the nation's most serious insurrection since the Civil War, as per the poll findings.
"I think that there's a great risk of fraud − not that any ballots would be fraudulent, but that the methods of which they attain them could be and that the people who receive them are not actually the people who they are for," said Jake Weber, 24, a contractor for General Motors from Clawson, Michigan, who was called in the poll. A political independent who leans to the GOP, he plans to vote for Trump.
"I believe that there's enough checks and balances...I don't have major concerns" about whether the 2024 election will be fair, said Michelle Derr, 55, a Democrat and small-business owner from Alexandria, Virginia, who plans to vote for Biden. But she added that "democracy as a whole" was being tested. "I think that we as a country can get through it, but I think it's not without effort."
Trump's voters have persisted with the view that the 2020 presidential election was "rigged" as the former President has drilled it into them through his social media platforms and speeches at rallies continuously for the last three years even as congressional committees and judges found those charges to be baseless.
Trump, on the other hand, faces 91 counts of felony that includes a civil tax fraud trial case in New York and charges of conspiracy and racketeering under the RICO act in four jurisdictions including DC and Georgia for election subversion. Despite these cases, Trump supporters hold onto the belief that he is not guilty as he professes and that the elections were stolen and his acts were in pursuance of his duty as a President as Trump claims, reports said.
Doubts have persisted even after reviews by election officials and state legislatures across the country have consistently concluded that allegations of widespread miscounts, misconduct, stuffed ballot boxes and ineligible voters were unsubstantiated and without any merit, media reports said .
More than 60 cases brought by Trump and his allies seeking to overturn the results have been defeated in federal and state courts. Those decisions were handed down by both Democratic-appointed and Republican-appointed judges, including federal judges who were appointed by Trump.
But in the poll, two-thirds (67 per cent) of those supporting Trump said they didn't believe Biden had been legitimately elected in 2020, a debunked assertion that Trump has continued to trumpet at rallies and on social media. That view has little traction among other voters: 98 per cent of those supporting Biden and 82 per cent of those supporting a third party said he was legitimately elected.
In the survey, Trump edged ahead of Biden 39 per cent to 37 per cent, with 17 per cent planning to vote for an unnamed third-party candidate. The poll of 1,000 registered voters, taken December 26-29 by landline and cell phone, has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points.
The continued turbulence and debate over the last election has stoked concern about the next one and those that would follow. An overwhelming 83 per cent of those surveyed said they worried about democracy. Half of Americans said they worried "a great deal".
That alarm however is not a reflection of a national consensus. Both sides on a partisan divide blame each other for imperilling democracy. Forty per cent (mostly Republicans) said Democrats were chiefly responsible for the threat; another 40 per cent (mostly Democrats) said Republicans were.
In response to an open-ended question about what specific threat worries them, the most frequent answer was Trump, cited by 18 per cent. Another 10 per cent named governmental corruption and dysfunction.
"Democrats/liberals/progressives" were cited by 7 per cent, and "MAGA/Trump followers" by 3 per cent and "Republicans/conservatives" by another 3 per cent. / IANS
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