Full article is longer, but...
Well, there we have it. The mass voter-fraud myth (which is often pretty obviously code for "minorities voting") has now become a pretext to abolish elections altogether, all in the name of fairness, of course (or rather, until enough voters have been purged to ensure perpetual Republican victory).Critics of President Trump have repeatedly warned of his potential to undermine American democracy. Among the concerns are his repeated assertions that he would have won the popular vote had 3 to 5 million "illegals" not voted in the 2016 election, a claim echoed by the head of a White House advisory committee on voter fraud.
Claims of large-scale voter fraud are not true, but that has not stopped a substantial number of Republicans from believing them. But how far would Republicans be willing to follow the president to stop what they perceive as rampant fraud? Our recent survey suggests that the answer is quite far: About half of Republicans say they would support postponing the 2020 presidential election until the country can fix this problem.
Does anyone honestly believe Trump wouldn't be willing to act on this if he thought he had the support to pull it off?
Hopefully he'll be impeached before much longer, but then, we are still left with the problem that the majority of one of our two main parties apparently openly no longer believes in democracy.
This is how dictatorships and civil wars begin. In fact, from one point of view, the last American civil war started when states seceded and attacked the Federal government because they refused to accept the result of an election they fairly lost.
I will also point out that even at the height of said civil war, Abraham Lincoln still allowed free elections, even while running against opponents who would have capitulated to the Confederacy had they won. Because Abraham Lincoln was neither a despot nor a coward, unlike the scum who have hijacked his party in more recent times.