HONESTY? Trump’s denial is the Second Big Lie

With the countdown to the midterms ticking toward its conclusion, America awaits the electoral fallout from the Big Lie: Donald Trump’s baseless conspiracy theories about widespread fraud in 2020. The nation heads into Election Day with millions of GOP voters primed to distrust its results. For a country where faith in elections forms the cornerstone of democracy, it’s a terrifying situation.

But it’s even worse than that.

These actions, while certainly not as dramatic or as immediately damaging as the events leading to Jan. 6 (and today), helped bring us to our current situation.

Trump’s mendacity is arguably the Second Big Lie. Four years earlier, the Hillary Clinton campaign and leading Democrats refused to acknowledge the outcome of the 2016 election, by claiming Donald Trump was not a legitimate president. These actions, while certainly not as dramatic or as immediately damaging as the events leading to Jan. 6 (and today), helped bring us to our current situation.

“He lost the election and he was put into office because the Russians interfered on his behalf,” ex-President Jimmy Carter said in 2019, continuing to deny Trump’s victory three years after the election.

“He knows he’s an illegitimate president,” said Clinton, also three years later. She repeated this sentiment in 2020, telling The Atlantic the election “was not on the level,” and again when she called Trump’s win illegitimate. She piled on to this by saying, “You can run the best campaign, you can even become the nominee, and you can have the election stolen from you,” clearly referring to how she saw her 2016 campaign.

Congressman and civil rights icon John Lewis went even further in 2017, saying: “I don’t see Trump as a legitimate president. … I think the Russians participated in helping this man get elected.”

Of course, Russia did meddle in the election via Facebook ads and cyberattacks, among other things, but as the Senate Intelligence Committee’s investigation of Russian interference concluded, there was no “evidence that vote tallies were manipulated.”

The uncomfortable reality is that Trump became president because 62 million Americans elected him. Denying this helped lead us to today, where a 2016 Economist/YouGov poll found that half of Clinton voters thought a foreign power tampered with voting results, while over 50%, and at times as much as 75%, of Republicans said they think Joe Biden was fraudulently elected, according to a Washington Post analysis.

These two phenomena are inextricably linked: The 2016 election denial paved the way for Trump’s lies four years later. It’s far past time we acknowledged this.

The refusal to recognize Trump’s victory began early, when Clinton declined to give a concession speech on election night, waiting until the next morning, instead. (In contrast Trump waited until after the Capitol riot, months later, to acknowledge reality in a speech that did not ever actually mention Biden by name.) By then, her campaign was already formulating a strategy to cast doubt on Trump’s legitimacy.

Clinton was not shy in offloading responsibility for her catastrophic loss. She blamed Bernie Sanders, Jill Stein and the media. She blamed racism, and she blamed Barack Obama; she blamed sexism while also blaming women. But all that was secondary to the overarching narrative: that Trump was an “illegitimate president.

According to reporters Jonathan Allen and Amie Parnes, the “strategy had been set within twenty-four hours of her concession speech” by campaign manager Robby Mook and chairman John Podesta, who met to “engineer the case that the election wasn’t entirely on the up-and-up” and “went over the script they would pitch to the press and the public. Already, Russian hacking was the centerpiece of the argument.”

And that argument never really went away.

In 2016, Reps. Nancy Pelosi and Adam Schiff of California, the House minority leader and the ranking Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, called on Congress to investigate Russia’s “hacking” of the election. The next year, Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Calif., argued Michigan’s votes should be discarded, Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., refused to say whether Trump was a legitimate president, and Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., said she believed Russia “altered the outcome” of the election. Meanwhile, Rep. Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., tried to have it both ways, calling Trump “legally elected” while simultaneously claiming his election was “illegitimate.” Two years after that, Democrats were still using the same rhetoric, with Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., saying Russia “hacked our elections.”

It’s no wonder that this year, a Rasmussen survey found 47% of likely U.S. voters believed it’s likely Russia changed the outcome of the 2016 election.

And those statements also must have had an effect on the 62 million Americans who voted for Trump in 2016: They were told, over and over, by senior members of the Democratic Party that their president — and therefore their vote — was, at least partly, illegitimate, that their vote may have been controlled by Russia.

The GOP’s 2020 denialism has been met with robust and rigorous debunking. Fact-checks of the 2016 denialism were far more anemic and all too often unchallenged. How insane are Trump’s claims that “millions of ballots” were altered or that dead people “voted” in Michigan? Just as insane as the claims that the KGB recruited Trump in the 1980s or that a bank server in Trump Tower was beeping and booping secret messages to Moscow or that Vladimir Putin had a hidden blackmail tape of Trump being urinated on by prostitutes?

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About the Author: Patriotman

Patriotman currently ekes out a survivalist lifestyle in a suburban northeastern state as best as he can. He has varied experience in political science, public policy, biological sciences, and higher education. Proudly Catholic and an Eagle Scout, he has no military experience and thus offers a relatable perspective for the average suburban prepper who is preparing for troubled times on the horizon with less than ideal teams and in less than ideal locations. Brushbeater Store Page: http://bit.ly/BrushbeaterStore

11 Comments

  1. Chef November 7, 2022 at 17:29

    Baseless. I guess I just dreamed what happened that night? A federal judge says we should not believe what we saw happen with our own eyes. The author shifts the blame to include Trump. I will admit that Trumps character faults and weakness as a leader have certainly contributed to the current situation. Bottom line corrupt politicians have undermined our faith in this great nations institutions. The nation has already begun to fracture due the unwillingness to punish the guilty. Now we all have to ride the shitstorm they created. Never forget who the real traitors are.

  2. micontra November 7, 2022 at 18:00

    The entire premise of this article is garbage. Why post this?

  3. Oughtsix November 7, 2022 at 19:28

    What a load of crap. There is No. Way. Basement Joe Biden got more votes, not only supposedly more than Trump, but more than Obama. Not to mention that, between Trump and Biden, more people apparently voted than there were registered voters.

    The list of “irregularities” is too extensive and credible to be ignored out of hand with the dismissive scorn of this writer. I find it hard to believe very many AmPart regulars believe there was no fraud in 2020, or that the selection and installment of Biden was all legit and the election valid.

  4. Lynn Addington November 7, 2022 at 23:09

    OMG. I’m left wondering how someone that I’ve read (and enjoyed, could possibly so Never-Trump. Have you tightly clamped your ears closed and missed the proof that our deranged media tried so very hard to hide? I am shocked at this article.

  5. Rex November 8, 2022 at 00:19

    What was the reason for posting this garbage? Everyone knows Trump won.

  6. Chef November 8, 2022 at 05:02

    Don’t believe what your own eyes saw on election night. Believe some federal judge. Ask someone from Poland how the judiciary is going for them? That might give you an inkling of how impossible a task it will be to legally and lawfully restore the republic to a government in line with the Constitution. “Our demoncracy,” has nothing to do with the Constitution, and in “our demoncracy,” old Joe got as many votes as he needed to win. Anyone who says different is an extremist. Just run along and vote again today and you’ll see for yourself!

    • Chef November 8, 2022 at 13:01

      Okay everybody needs to cook their jets. P.M. is doing us a favor by posting content that very insightfully shows you what is in the mainstream. You cannot live in an echo chamber and just because he posts something doesn’t mean he or anyone here subscribes to it. I wouldn’t think I even need to say that…

  7. Teddy Bear November 8, 2022 at 06:41

    2016: Special prosecutor, years of legal proceedings.
    2020: SCOTUS and other courts says “nah, it’ll be fine” when asked to hear the case

    Yeah, these are definitely equivalent events.

  8. Okie Hokie November 8, 2022 at 07:42

    The fact that NBC is calling out Dems on their lies (albeit 6 years late) speaks volumes

  9. Überdeplorable Psychedelic Cat Grass November 8, 2022 at 08:59

    They probably posted it here to show you how the enemy thinks. On that note, I just went to vote and, much to my surprise, they failed to update the district maps after our congressional districts were re-drawn last year. I ended up having to vote for somebody who is not my Congress critter. We could always have purple ink and no early voting but that would make too much sense .

  10. JT November 8, 2022 at 12:57

    Wow, talk about cherry picking facts. “Clinton didn’t incite a riot” ? Say what? What the hell was that at the Jan 2017 innauguration? And the day after? Talk about propaganda. Geesh.
    Im all for looking at both sides (know thy enemy, ect..) but good grief what a bunch of BS.

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