To say that the upcoming election is the most important in American history is a cliché at this point, more of a biannual tradition than an actual warning. The arguments made often sound ridiculous in retrospect — but there is a strong case for the 2022 midterms to be the most important election in American history.
The results of next month’s voting will determine if there are any more real elections in the future. Also on the ballot are potential global financial apocalypse, enormous cuts to Medicare and Social Security, and all manner of ancillary issues. And yet these issues are almost totally absent from mainstream political reporting, and apparently, the minds of swing voters who will decide the control of Congress and statewide offices around the country.
The stakes badly need to be clarified, so consider this an attempt to lay them bare.
The stakes badly need to be clarified, so consider this an attempt to lay them bare.
First, Republicans have nominated 2020 election deniers to oversee electoral processes in swing states Arizona, Nevada, Michigan and Pennsylvania. And these nominees are barely trying to hide their intentions. Given the attempted putsch Jan. 6, 2021 — which Doug Mastriano, Pennsylvania’s Republican candidate for governor, not only attended, but also organized buses for — we should take these candidates at their word.
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Should they win, they will certainly attempt to end democracy as we know it in their states. The effort will probably look like an updated version of Jim Crow: extreme gerrymandering of state legislative seats, like in Wisconsin, where an 8-point popular vote loss gives Republicans a 63 percent supermajority in the state Assembly; tight restrictions on who is allowed to vote, like in Florida, where the Republican government blatantly ignored a ballot initiative that restored the franchise to largely-Black ex-felons; and above all, violent intimidation of liberals and minorities, again like in Florida, where Gov. Ron DeSantis arrested and charged numerous people for supposedly illegal voting that was, in fact, his own administration’s fault.
I would not even rule out actual organized election theft, as Trump attempted to bully Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger into doing, or canceling elections entirely, as the deranged “independent state legislature” theory currently before the Supreme Court could possibly allow. Should Republicans take control of any three of these swing states, they would be able to rig the Electoral College for whoever their nominee is in 2024.
Second, let’s look at what Republicans would do if they won control of either branch of Congress. All four Republicans running to be chair of the House Budget Committee recently promised that should they win, they will take the debt ceiling hostage to force President Joe Biden to agree to massive cuts to Social Security and Medicare. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., agreed, telling Punchbowl News on Tuesday that America “can’t just continue down the path to keep spending and adding to the debt.”








