Two weeks after the November 3 presidential election, United States President Donald Trump continues to tell the country and the world: 鈥淚 won the election.鈥 He insists it was not even close: 鈥淚 won by millions of votes.鈥
His cohorts, from his Cabinet on down the line, declare support for their 鈥渓eader鈥. They say the system is rigged and the Democrats 鈥渟tole鈥 the election.
Protests by Trump backers have even occurred in states such as California, where Trump lost by more than five million votes.
Trump鈥檚 aim is to undermine the constitutional system. He controls the state apparatus, including the armed forces. So far, all his chaotic actions have failed to stop the transition to a new Joe Biden Democratic presidency in two months.
Legal defeats
There have been 37 lawsuits and the score is 35 losses to 2 minor wins for Trump's lawyers. However, Trump says these are not defeats.
His lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, gave a bizarre media conference on November 19, where he proclaimed 鈥渆vidence鈥 of Democratic Party fraud, but refused to show it.
Attorney Sidney Powell also made extreme, baseless claims, about 鈥渃ommunist Venezuela and George Soros鈥 supposedly interfering in the election. She also claimed that: a supercomputer called Hammer hacked votes; that Trump won the election by 鈥渕illions of votes鈥; and that voting software company Dominion Voting Systems altered the results.
Trump then sought support from Republican state legislators in Michigan to overturn the election result there. He lost the state by more than 157,000 votes. The national and Michigan Republican Party are demanding the results not be certified until a full audit of Wayne County is done, where the 80% African American city of Detroit is located.
[UPDATE: In a further blow to Trump, Michigan's state electoral board approved its result on November 23, according to the NYT, resisting pressure from Trump to delay the process and paving the way for.Biden to receive the state鈥檚 16 electoral votes.]
Trump鈥檚 campaign seeks to disenfranchise Black voters. It is striking that mainly white counties in Michigan, Pennsylvania and other states that voted Democratic are not being pushed to conduct audits and voter disqualifications.
In a scathing order on November 21, Pennsylvania judge Matthew W Brann wrote that Trump鈥檚 campaign, which had asked him to effectively disenfranchise nearly 7 million voters, should have come to court 鈥渁rmed with compelling legal arguments and factual proof of rampant corruption鈥 in its efforts to essentially nullify the results of Pennsylvania鈥檚 election.
The Trump campaign, he wrote, provided only 鈥渟trained legal arguments without merit, and speculative accusations鈥 that were 鈥渦nsupported by evidence鈥. He kicked out the lawsuit.
The next day, the Trump campaign appealed his order.
At the time of writing, it is expected that Pennsylvania and Nevada will certify Biden's win.
Democracy exposed
鈥淒emocracy鈥 in the world鈥檚 most powerful country is based on a house of cards. Most people probably assume that, in elections, if a majority of people vote for a candidate, that person wins. It is a winner takes all system, except when electing the President.
This is why Trump can do what he is doing. Each state must approve electors for the winning party; then a month later they pick the winner. Along the way, from November 3 to December 14 (when electors meet to ratify the results) to January 20, anything can occur. Since the late 1800s, there has been a smooth transfer of power.
Trump sees the contradictions in the system, and is exploiting it by using the 鈥渂ig lie鈥. When he falsely says repeatedly, 鈥淚 won鈥, his supporters believe him. It undermines the electoral system and democratic rule.
While legal scholars and establishment experts believe Trump will leave office on January 20, Trump does not agree.
It is about power, not law.
Everything Trump has done for four years has shattered past assumptions of what presidents should do.
The president is sworn to defend the country from foreign and domestic enemies. Trump calls Democrats 鈥渆nemies鈥 and has repeatedly demanded they be arrested, including Biden, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and former President Barack Obama.
Most dismiss his demands.
Biden鈥檚 response
Meanwhile, Biden and the Democrats officially operate as though it is inevitable Biden will take office on January 20.
Biden, a corporate liberal, has made it clear he intends to act in the interests of Wall Street, even as he gives lip service to supporting the interests of labour and the working class.
So far, his early appointments to his government-in-waiting are gender and racially mixed moderates and right-of-centre politicians.
The more liberal and progressive wing of the Democratic Party have been shut out.
Indigenous, racial justice and climate activists staged an occupation outside the Democratic National Committee in Washington, DC, on November 19, calling on Biden to take immediate action on climate change and to approve the Green New Deal. Advocates are also calling for a Cabinet free of lobbyists and others with close industry ties.
A number of lawmakers spoke at the protest, including Missouri鈥檚 Democratic Congressmember-elect Cori Bush, the state鈥檚 first Black woman elected to Congress, and New York Democratic Congressmember Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
Leaders of the Black Lives Matter movement, who had few, if any, illusions before the elections, are urging followers to keep the pressure on city, state and federal governments (Republican and Democrat) to protect Black lives.
Black-led protests continued during the election campaign when cops shot and killed new victims. The uprising began under Trump and will continue under Biden.
What is unknown is how the ruling class will react if Trump attempts a self-described Constitutional coup.
Trump and his Attorney General William Barr claim the 鈥淚mperial Presidency鈥 is what the Constitution states. Under this interpretation, any actions by the president cannot be declared illegal, because of his sworn declaration to fight all enemies, by any means he chooses.
[UPDATE: On November 23, following the decision in Michigan, Emily Murphy, the administrator of the General Services Administration in the White House signed a letter authorising resources to begin a transition and allowing Biden's advisers to begin coordinating with Trump administration officials. She had previously refused to do so.]
Unions can respond
A sign that resistance is possible, however, is the decision taken on November 21 by the Vermont state union federation, at the state American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO) convention.
A powerful resolution was adopted by delegates to defend democracy in the case of a 鈥減olitical coup鈥. It states: 鈥淭he Vermont AFL-CIO is empowered by the delegates at the 2020 state convention to call for a general strike of all working people in our state in the event that Donald Trump refuses to concede the office of President of the United States.
鈥淭he Vermont AFL-CIO will work with allies in the anti-racist, environmental justice, feminist, LGBTQ+, immigrant rights, and disability rights movements to protect our democracy, the Constitution, the law, and our nation鈥檚 democratic traditions.
鈥淭he Vermont AFL-CIO will call on city and county governments to pledge to protect protesters defending democracy, and commit to not using police action or curfews to curtail these activities, and to use all available resources to stand up against any effort by the Trump administration to steal the presidential election.
鈥淭he Vermont AFL-CIO commits itself to the long-term goal of winning genuine democracy through the abolition of the Electoral College and two-party system, through the collective action of our affiliates and allied organisations.鈥
[This article was updated on November 24.]