World

Republicans ‘poisoning’ US democracy, says Senate’s top Democrat

Chuck Schumer says GOP politicians who have no evidence of significant electoral fraud are ‘auditioning for profiles in cowardice’

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 13 Nov 2020 9:30AM

Republicans ‘poisoning’ US democracy, says Senate’s top Democrat
Several Republican lawmakers are standing firm with President Donald Trump by supporting his refusal to concede last week’s election. – Pixabay pic, November 13, 2020

WASHINGTON – The US Senate’s top Democrat yesterday warned his Republican colleagues that they are “poisoning” the country’s democracy by continuing to refuse to acknowledge Joe Biden’s presidential election victory last week.

Only a handful of Republicans have publicly congratulated Biden – who himself served for decades in the Senate – an awkward break with political tradition that has heightened the sense of polarisation here.

Several Republican lawmakers, including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, have stood firm with President Donald Trump by supporting his refusal to concede the election and backing the flood of legal challenges that the party has introduced following the vote.

“We just had a divisive and hard-fought presidential election,” a clearly frustrated Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer told reporters.

“But instead of working to pull the country back together so that we can fight our common enemy, Covid-19, Republicans in Congress are spreading conspiracy theories, denying reality and poisoning the well of our democracy.”

Instead of following political norms and extolling the US’ ongoing tradition of a peaceful transition of power, he said, Republicans who have no evidence of significant electoral fraud are “denying reality” and “auditioning for profiles in cowardice”.

“Congressional Republicans are deliberately casting doubt on our election for no other reason but fear of Donald Trump,” he said, even after every major US media outlet called the race in Biden’s favour.

Meanwhile, the current administration’s continued delay in recognising Biden’s victory is posing “a serious risk to national security”, warned 161 former national security officials, including some who worked with Trump.

In a letter, the group, including former Pentagon chief Chuck Hagel and Trump’s former National Security Counsel senior counterterrorism director, Javed Ali, urged General Services Administration (GSA) chief Emily Murphy to recognise Biden as president-elect.

Without a GSA sign-off, transition funds and other resources, including access to intelligence briefings, cannot flow to Biden and his team. However, Murphy has refused to budge.

“Further delaying the Biden team’s ability to access the president’s daily brief and other national security information and resources compromises the continuity and readiness of our national leadership, with potentially immense consequences for our national security,” said the letter. – AFP, November 13, 2020

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