near that northern city.
The Economist
September 5th 2020
15
1
I
n his final
debate with Hillary Clinton
in 2016, Donald Trump refused to commit
himself to accepting the results of the com-
ing election. The following day he made his
position clearer. “I will totally accept the
results of this great and historic presiden-
tial election,” he said in mock solemnity—
before adding, with finger-wagging em-
phasis: “If I win.” The stubby finger levelled
itself at the crowd, which erupted into
cheers; the not-yet-president grinned.
President Trump went on to win with
304 Electoral College votes to Mrs Clinton’s
227, and so how he would in fact have react-
ed had things gone the other way remains a
matter of speculation. This year there ap-
pears to be a strong chance that he will not
win;
The Economist
’s election-forecasting
model currently puts his chances at one in
seven. Mr Trump, though, denies any pos-
sibility that he could lose a fair contest:
“The only way we’re going to lose this elec-
tion is if the election is rigged,” he told his
followers in August. There can be no real
doubt that, should he indeed lose, he
would claim that the election was stolen.
That, come November 4th, such a theft
will actually have taken place is remark-
ably unlikely. Admittedly William Evanina,
who directs the National Counterintelli-
gence and Security Centre, says that China
and Iran have joined Russia in seeking to
influence this election through covert
means, presumably emboldened by Russia
having paid little price for having done so
last time. This is a shocking development.
But even if they were all pushing in the
same direction—which is unlikely—there
is no reason to think that they could deci-
sively tip the result. America’s electoral
system is sufficiently decentralised for at-
tempts to rig the vote on a large scale to be
incredibly hard. And though voter fraud
occasionally takes place, both in-person
and by means of absentee ballots, it is
harshly punished and very rare; various
studies have found the rate to be well below
one in a million votes cast.
But this does not mean that Mr Trump’s
protestations will be of no account. Ameri-
ca is deeply polarised, and in a few places
armed partisans have taken to the streets.
Both parties have portrayed this year’s con-
test as existentially important to America’s
future, warning that the country will be
forever altered for the worse if the other
candidate wins. The new round of foreign
interference, like the lies and fearmonger-
ing from the president himself, add both to
the stock of disinformation and the perva-
sive sense that things are not to be trusted.
As a result a significant number of Ameri-
cans of all political stripes doubt that the
election will be held fairly (see chart on
next page). On top of it all, the election is
being held during an epidemic that will, by
election day, have killed over 200,000.
In June a bipartisan group of campaign
veterans, elected officials, journalists and
academics convened by the Transition In-
tegrity Project, a group founded last year,
set about war-gaming four different possi-
ble election results: a commanding victory
for Joe Biden, a narrow victory for Mr Bi-
den, a narrow victory for Mr Trump
achieved, as his previous one was, without
a majority of the popular vote, and a result
in which, because of contested outcomes
in battleground states, the identity of the
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