The preservation of democracy in America seems to have been reduced to just another partisan issue, like wokeness or police conduct. Of the many profoundly dismaying findings in the recent New York Times poll of six swing states, the one that seems most baffling is that on democracy President Joe Biden leads Donald Trump by only 3 points. I can understand why Trump leads Biden on the economy or immigration. But how can we have an almost flat-footed tie on democracy between the former president who has been indicted for attempting to overthrow the will of the voters in the 2020 election and the incumbent who has done his best to uphold the rule of law? Only two years ago, 80 percent of Democrats, and 70 percent of Republicans,
“The preservation of the principle of limited executive authority, of the orderly transfer of power, of the rule of laws rather than men, is something that we have all been taught to regard as a sacred obligation.”
Perhaps the biggest question, which I am sure you will address soon, is whether we have indeed all been taught this.
“The preservation of the principle of limited executive authority, of the orderly transfer of power, of the rule of laws rather than men, is something that we have all been taught to regard as a sacred obligation.”
Perhaps the biggest question, which I am sure you will address soon, is whether we have indeed all been taught this.