It was just last week when Republican Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin hedged when asked whether he’d accept the results of his own re-election bid. It’s part of the new normal in his party: Too many Republicans headed into Election Day by suggesting the only elections they see as legitimate are the ones in which they win.
CNN’s Dana Bash asked Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel whether she agrees with Johnson’s approach. The party leader made it sound as if questioning the integrity of vote counts is simply a normal part of the process. From the network transcript:
“Listen, you should have a recount. You should have a canvass. And it’ll go to the courts, and then everybody should accept the results. That’s what it should be.”
Soon after, in the same interview, McDaniel went on to say that Republicans “will accept the results” after the entirety of the process plays out.
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Part of the problem with the RNC chair’s line is practical. The way the process has traditionally worked, at least in the United States, is that there’s an election, votes are tallied, results are announced, and winners are given the opportunity to govern. McDaniel apparently envisions a revised model in which there’s an election, votes are tallied, results are announced, recounts are held, canvasses are also held, lawsuits are filed, court hearings are held, judicial rulings are issued, and eventually, if we’re all very lucky, the relevant parties “should” honor the eventual outcome.
There are 435 U.S. House seats on the line today, as well as 34 U.S. Senate seats, 36 gubernatorial offices, and thousands of down-ballot contests across the country. As far as the Republican National Committee is concerned, how many of these contests should stick to her needlessly lengthy, multi-step, multi-branch process?
The other part of the problem, however, is the concluding assumption of McDaniel’s pitch: Everybody “should” accept the results, the RNC chair argued, after the counts, recounts, canvasses, lawsuits, and court rulings. But what if they don’t? A Washington Post analysis explained yesterday:









