The Last Democratic Election
Abstract
:1. Introduction
“I have the absolute right to PARDON myself.”4 June 2018, tweet by @REALDONALDTRUMP (United to Protect Democracy 2024, p. 15)
“I will tell you, I will look very, very favorably about full pardons. If I decide to run and if I win, I will be looking very, very strongly about pardons. Full pardons. … We’ll be looking very, very seriously at full pardons because we can’t let that happen. … And I mean full pardons with an apology to many (Ibid., p. 15).Donald Trump, speaking about 6 January 2021 rioters in a September 2022 interview
“I say up front, openly and proudly, that when I WIN the Presidency of the United States, they and others of the LameStream Media will be thoroughly scrutinized for their knowingly dishonest and corrupt coverage of people, things, and events. Why should NBC, or any other of the corrupt & dishonest media companies, be entitled to use the very valuable Airwaves of the USA, FREE? They are a true threat to Democracy and are, in fact THE ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE! The Fake News Media should pay a big price for what they have done to our once great Country!” (Ibid., p. 29)Trump post on Truth Social, September 2023
“I will immediately re-issue my 2020 Executive Order restoring the President’s authority to remove rogue bureaucrats. And I will wield that power very aggressively.” (Ibid., p. 29)Donald Trump for President, 2024
“They let—I think, the real number is 15, 16 million people into our country. When they do that, we got a lot of work to do. They’re poisoning the blood of our country.” (Ibid., p. 40)Trump’s comment about immigrants at a political rally on 16 September 2023
“I will bring back the travel ban and expand it even further to keep radical Islamic terrorists out of our country. … The worst enemy is the enemy from within. … Those who join our country must love our country and we’re going to keep foreign Christian hating communists, Marxists, socialists. We’re going to keep ‘em the hell out of America. We Don’t want ‘em. …” (Ibid., p. 40)Trump speech in Dubuque, Iowa, 20 September 2023.
“I’ll also invoke immediately the Alien Enemies Act.” (Ibid., p. 40)Trump speech in Dubuque, Iowa, 20 September 2023
“[T]he federal government can and should send the National Guard to restore order and secure the peace without having to wait for the approval of some governor who thinks it’s politically incorrect to call them in.” (Ibid., p. 48)Trump remarks to America First Policy Institute, July 2022
They are eating the dogs, they are eating the cats. … They are eating the pets of the people who live there.”1Donald Trump falsely accusing Haitian immigrants of eating the pets of their neighbors in Springfield, Ohio, during the presidential debate on 10 September 2024.
2. How Donald Trump and the Republicans Will Destroy American Democracy
For all its marvelous creativity, the human imagination often fails when turned to the future. It is blunted, perhaps, by a craving for the familiar. When Donald Trump is the subject, imagination blunders further. Trump operates so much out of the bounds of normal human behavior—never mind normal political behavior—that is difficult to accept what he may do even when he declares his intentions openly. What is more, we have experienced one Trump presidency already. We can take false comfort from that previous experience. We’ve lived through it once. American democracy survived/Maybe the danger is less than we feared?
2.1. Trump Will Wage War on the Rule of Law
2.2. Launching a Full Scale Federal Assault Against “Wokeness”
- They propose adding work requirements to federal food stamp programs;
- They propose deleting terms “sexual orientation and gender identity”, “diversity, equity, and inclusion”, “gender”, “gender equality”, “gender awareness”, “gender sensitivity”, “abortion”, “reproductive health”, “reproductive rights”, and any other term used to “deprive people of their First Amendment rights” from every federal rule, agency regulation, and piece of legislation that exists;
- The authors equate “transgender ideology” with pornography and the sexualization of children. Those who produce and disseminate “transgender ideology” should be imprisoned. Librarians and educators who “purvey” these materials should be registered as sex offenders. Telecommunication and technology firms who distribute such materials should be shut down;
- Schools, in the authors’ vision, “exist to serve parents”, as opposed to the traditional function of ensuring that states have an educated population equipped with the requisite skills to both compete in the marketplace and to be informed citizens. This foundational belief not only justifies a radical commitment to parental choice in education (manifested in taxpayer-funded “vouchers” to send their children to the schools of their choice) but the right of parents to override the professional judgment of educators and administrators in curricula decisions when they believe they are being “indoctrinated” by “woke” ideas about systemic racism or sexism, LGBT+ rights, environmentalism, and other progressive causes;
- End teaching of “critical race theory” and “gender ideology” in public schools;
- Ban parents and doctors from “reassigning” the sex of minors;
- Dismantle the “administrative state”16 of mostly unelected federal bureaucrats in federal agencies who arrogate power that constitutionally belongs to Congress and use their authority to impose a “woke” agenda on the American public;
- They propose to seal the U.S. southern border and end illegal immigration;
- Conservatives repudiate the vast scientific consensus about human-caused climate change and propose to dismantle the policies of the Biden administration to address the warming planet. They would “end the woke war” on fossil fuels by eliminating, consolidating, or devolving to the states agencies such as the National Oceanographic and Aeronautics Administration (NOAA). The authors accuse agencies like NOAA of being part of the “climate change alarm industry” that has unjustly vilified the fossil fuel industry and threatens the American economy;
- The document identifies China not as a strategic partner, but as America’s greatest adversary. America should abandon decades of policies that have interlocked the world’s two largest economies. Instead, the United States should disentangle its economy from China and return the industrial and manufacturing base that it outsourced there back to America;
- They propose to withdraw the United States from any and all international treaties and agreements—with entities such as the United Nations or the European Union—that “undermine American sovereignty”. The 2015 Paris Climate Accords, which set global targets that the world’s nations obligated themselves to meet, stands out as a prime example of this principle;
- The Supreme Court’s decision in Dobbs vs. Jackson Women’s Health Organization that overturned the federal constitutional right to abortion enshrined by Roe vs. Wade should not only be celebrated but should be built upon. The national government should seek a federal ban on abortion and support state-level efforts to “protect life” (Dens and Groves 2023, pp. 4–13).
2.3. Political Repression Will Be Necessary for Trump to Rule
2.4. “Leader of the Free World” No More
2.5. He Would Not Leave Office
3. Conclusions
When someone shows you who they are, believe them the first time.Maya Angelou
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Daniel Arkin and David Ingram, “Trump Pushes Baseless Claim About Immigrants ‘Eating the Pets,’” NBC News, September 10. https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2024-election/trump-pushes-baseless-claim-immigrants-eating-pets-rcna170537 (accessed on 8 October 2024). |
2 | Jonah Bromwich and Ben Protess, “Trump Guilty on All Counts in Hush Money Case,” www.nytimes.com, 31 May 2024. https://www.nytimes.com/live/2024/05/30/nyregion/trump-trial-verdict (accessed on 26 June 2024). Prosecutors alleged that Donald Trump participated in a scheme to falsify business records in order to cover up USD 130,000 in payments to Stormy Daniels (whose real name is Stephanie Clifford) in exchange for her promise to keep quiet about their extramarital affair. The state alleges that Trump’s personal attorney, Michael Cohen, made the payments to Daniels, and the former president falsified business records to make it appear that these payments were for legal services rendered. Cohen has already been convicted and served time for his role in the scheme (Kates and Kaufman 2024a). |
3 | In addition to the hush money case, a federal grand jury in Miami on 8 June 2023 indicted Donald Trump of 37 counts for allegedly taking hundreds of classified documents to his private residence after leaving office and obstructing the government’s effort to recover the materials after they were discovered missing. Weeks later, that same jury returned a superseding indictment against the former president and two coconspirators, alleging that the three engaged in a conspiracy to obstruct justice. On 1 August 2023, he was indicted by a federal grand jury in the District of Columbia for criminally conspiring to overturn the 2020 election. Merely days later after federal charges in the January 6 investigation were filed against the former president, Trump, along with 18 codefendants, were indicted for engaging in a wide-ranging, multipronged conspiracy to steal the election in the state of Georgia. Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis charged the codefendants under the state’s Racketeer Influenced Corrupt Organizations (RICO) statute, a law originally designed to give federal prosecutors the tools to go after organized crime. Yet, despite the prospect that Donald Trump’s 2024 would be littered with attending multiple trials, his lawyers have successfully filed motion after motion—many of them obviously frivolous and outlandish—that have achieved the result that he wants—delay, delay, delay, and with the exception of the Manhattan hush money trial, no adjudication before the 2024 presidential election. Knutson et al. (2023); The People of the State of New York v. Donald Trump (Supreme Court of the State of New York County of New York, 30 March 2023); The People of the State of New York v. Donald Trump, Statement of Facts (Supreme Court of the State of New York County of New York, 30 March 2023), Available Online: https://manhattanda.org/district-attorney-bragg-announces-34-count-felony-indictment-of-former-president-donald-j-trump/, accessed on 14 August 2023; Kinnard and Price (2023); Eeuer (2024); Levine (2024); United States of America v. Donald Trump and Waltine Nauta, (U.S. Dist. Court, Southern District of Florida), Case 9:23-cr-80101-AMC, 8 June 2023; United States of America v. Donald Trump, Waltine Nauta, and Carlos de Oliveira, Superseding Indictment, Case No. 23-CR-80101-CANNON(s), (U.S. Dist. Court, Southern District, Florida), 27 July 2023.; United States of America v. Donald Trump, (Case 1:23-cr-00257-TSC, U.S. Dist. Court, Dist. Of Columbia), 1 August 2023. https://www.democracydocket.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/74-2023-10-05-mtd.pdf; The State of Georgia v. Donald Trump, et al., Indictment, (Fulton County Superior Court), 14 August 2023. |
4 | The judge’s order bans Trump from being an officer in any New York corporation for three years and appoints outside monitors over the Trump Organization. The company is also forbidden from seeking loans from any financial institutions authorized to operate in New York for three years and is prohibited from refinancing any of its current loans without the approval of the outside monitors appointed over the organization. The judgement also penalizes Trump’s two oldest sons, Eric and Donald Jr., with USD 4 million fines apiece and bars them from serving as officers in any New York corporation for two years. The judge also levied a USD 1 million disgorgement fine against Alan Weisselberg, Trump’s Chief Financial Officer (CFO) for his participation in the fraudulent schemes of the corporation. People of the State of New York, by Letitia James v. Donald Trump, et al., Decision and Order, Supreme Court of the State of New York New York County, 16 February 2024. |
5 | (Swan et al. 2023; Dens and Groves 2023), “Mandate for Leadership: The Conservative Promise,” Available online: https://www.project2025.org/ (accessed on 27 August 2023). |
6 | For example, elected Republicans remained mostly mute when Donald Trump recently called for “suspending the Constitution” and installing himself as president to remedy the “massive fraud” of the 2020 presidential election in which he continues to insist (despite all the evidence to the contrary) that he was the rightful winner. Rep. Dave Joyce (R-Ohio), one of the few Republicans who reacted for the record, downplayed Trump’s comments. In an interview with ABC’s “This Week”, Rep. Joyce said, “Well, you know, he says a lot of things. That doesn’t mean it’s ever going to happen. So you’ve got to accept exact fact from fantasy” (Jackson 2022). |
7 | A few samplings of reactions by prominent Republicans amplifies the point. Sen. J.D. Vance (R-Ohio) said, “Trump’s super power is that he’s the most quick witted leader in a generation. Every grown man hyperventilating about this clip needs to find a sense of humor”. In other words, the problem is not with Trump and his rhetoric, but how some “overly sensitive” people are reacting to it. Sen. Tom Tillis (R-North Carolina) told CNN, “He (Trump) said he would do two things: he would close the border and drill. Everybody could say that’s abusing power, I think that’s a righteous use of power, and President Biden failed on it.” Even Sen. Mitt Romney, the only Republican who voted to convict Trump in both his impeachment trials in the Senate, dismissed Trump’s comments as mere efforts aimed at “firing up the base” and “entertaining people” (Benen 2023b). |
8 | A few article references will suffice to make this point (Henninger 2021; Jenkins 2021; Editorial Board 2022; Finley 2023; Jenkins 2023; Henninger 2024). |
9 | A sampling of assessments of Trump’s character is sufficient to make the point. His former Vice President Mike Pence said, “The American people deserve to know that President Trump asked me to put him over my oath to the Constitution. … Anyone who puts himself over the Constitution should never be president of the United States”. Trump’s first Secretary of Defense, General James Mattis said, “Donald Trump is the first president in my lifetime who does not try to unite the American people—does not even pretend to try. Instead, he tries to divide us”. His second chief of staff, John Kelly said this about Trump: “A person that has nothing but contempt for our democratic institutions, our Constitution, and the rule of law. There is nothing more that can be said. God help us.” Finally, his third National Security Adviser, John Bolton, in referring to Trump, said, “I believe (foreign leaders) think he is a laughing fool”. Zachary B. Wolf, “24 Former Trump Allies and Aides Who Have Turned Against Him,” www.cnn.com. 3 October 2023. https://www.cnn.com/2023/10/03/politics/donald-trump-former-allies-what-matters/index.html (accessed on 20 February 2024). |
10 | Michael Sisak, Jennifer Peltz, Jake Offenhentz, and Collen Long, “Hush Money Trial Judge Raises Threat of Jail as He Finds Trump Violated Gag Order, Fines Him $9K,” www.apnews.com. 30 April 2024. https://apnews.com/article/trump-stormy-daniels-hush-money-election-2024-d2f9badee0b28a60d32bc98c0d4e783f (accessed on 26 June 2024); Ben Feurerherd, “Trump is Still Pushing the Limits of the Gag Order. It Could Come Back to Haunt Him at Sentencing,’ www.politico.com, 25 May 2024. https://www.politico.com/news/2024/05/25/trump-hush-money-gag-order-sentencing-00159995 (accessed on 26 June 2024). |
11 | Marianna Sotomayor and Liz Goodwin, “GOP Plans Aggressive ‘Weaponization’ Investigations in Wake of Trump Conviction” www.washingtonost.com, 14 June 2024. https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2024/06/04/gop-trump-house-weaponization-investigations/ (accessed on 26 June 2024); (Grayer et al. 2024). |
12 | The Supreme Court, which usually works in a deliberate fashion, has been known to act quickly in cases that are of such national import that a quick resolution is required to avert a constitutional crisis. This occurred in New York Times vs. United States (403 U.S. 713 [1971]) when the Nixon administration tried to prevent the New York Times and the Washington Post from publishing the Pentagon Papers, which exposed information about the Vietnam War that the administration wanted to keep from the public. Similarly, the Court moved swiftly in United States vs. Nixon (418 U.S. 683 [1974]), the Nixon Watergate tapes case, and Bush vs. Gore (531 U.S. 98 [2000]), the case that settled the disputed 2000 presidential election. However, this Supreme Court has purposely slow-walked this case. Both the district court and court of appeals easily dispensed of Trump’s preposterous claim that presidents have absolute immunity from prosecution for actions taken while president after they leave office. Both lower courts found that such a claim would make the president effectively above the law, like a king. Many legal experts did not expect the Court to take the case at all. Not only did the Court take the case, but the justices chose to schedule oral arguments for the case at the latest possible date on its calendar and purposely delayed rendering a decision until the last date of the term. In doing so, they effectively ensured that the Jan. 6 case against the former president could not take place before the 2024 election—which was the whole point of Trump’s appeal in the first place. The Court’s lack of urgency in handling United States vs. Trump stands in marked contrast to how it handled the case of Trump vs. Anderson (601 U.S. ___ [2024], slip opinion) after the Colorado Supreme Court ruled that the state could remove Trump’s name from its presidential primary ballot under Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment that forbids any officer who participated in an insurrection after taking an oath to defend the Constitution from holding office. In the Anderson case, the Court moved with swiftness because an inordinate delay would effectively remove Trump’s name from the state’s presidential primary on Super Tuesday. However, in U.S. vs. Trump, by treating Trump’s outlandish legal arguments as if they are “close questions”, they have allowed a candidate to seek the presidency in the upcoming presidential election without being held accountable for trying to steal the last one. |
13 | 601 U.S. __ (2024) [slip opinion]. In a 6–3 opinion, the Court held that in the “core” and “exclusive” powers of the executive, the president is immune from criminal prosecution. In areas where the president’s powers are shared with Congress, the president has a “presumptive” immunity; the burden would be on prosecutors to establish that the president does not have immunity. Presidential immunity does not extend to the president’s unofficial acts. However, precisely which acts are “official” as opposed to “unofficial” was not made clear by the court. Moreover, the Court also held that evidence from the president’s official acts could not be used to try him for allegations stemming from his “unofficial” or “personal” acts. Thus, the Supreme Court’s conservative majority seemed more concerned about an overzealous, politically motivated prosecutor “chilling” a president, because he or she subjects his official actions to legal scrutiny than the real risks that a president, unrestrained by the deterrent of criminal prosecution for violating the law, would abuse his powers. Justices Sotomayor and Justice Jackson wrote blistering dissents in this case. Trump v. United States, 603 U.S.___ (2024); Trump v. United States (J. Jackson, dissenting), 601 U.S. ___ (2024) [slip opinion]; Trump v. United States (J. Sotomayor, dissenting), 601 U.S. ___ (2024) [slip opinion]. |
14 | Donald Trump’s twisted view of the Justice Department, for example, is why he had a falling out with his first Attorney General, Jeff Sessions, despite their ideological agreement on a range of issues. For Trump, Jeff Sessions’ unforgivable sin was when he recused himself in the DOJ’s investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election. Sessions’ decision ultimately led to the appointment of Special Counsel Robert Meuller. Trump raged at Sessions for his recusal. Instead of viewing his decision as necessary to avoid the appearance of bias, Donald Trump saw Sessions’ decision as an example of personal betrayal. |
15 | More than a dozen people who have run afoul of Donald Trump for various reasons are deeply worried that the former president will use his power to seek revenge personally against them if he is re-elected. They are considering ways of protecting themselves in the face of possible investigations, harassment, prosecutions, or attempts to strip them of their livelihood. Some are considering whether they should leave the country (Nicholas 2024). |
16 | Some specific examples of what conservatives mean by the “administrative state” that they intend to dismantle include: (1) elected and unelected officials within the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) who “strangle” fossil fuel energy production with overly complicated, job-killing regulations; (2) bureaucrats at the Department of Homeland Security who “order” border and immigration agencies to help migrants enter the country illegally; (3) officials in the Department of Education who inject “racist”, “anti-American”, “ahistorical propaganda”, into America’s classrooms; (4) officials at the Department of Justice who force school districts to “undermine” girls’ sports and “parents’ rights” to accommodate “transgender extremists”; (5) “Woke” bureaucrats at the Pentagon who force troops to attend “training” about “white privilege” instead of concentrating on fighting and winning wars; (6) bureaucrats in the State Department who infuse U.S. foreign aid programs with “woke extremism” about “intersectionality” and “abortion.” (Dens and Groves 2023, pp. 7–8). |
17 | The Alien Enemies Act is the last remaining portion of the Alien and Sedition Act of 1798 enacted during the administration of President John Adams during the “quasi-war” with France. The law empowers the president broad authority to detain or deport noncitizens during a declared war or a presidentially declared emergency who are deemed to pose a threat to national security. The Alien Enemies Act has only been invoked three times in American history—during the War of 1812, World War I, and World War II. This law was the legal authority that was relied upon to detain over 100,000 people of Japanese descent during World War II in internment camps for the duration of the war (Ebright 2024). |
18 | Also under consideration by Trump officials is reinstating Title 42, an emergency order issued by the Center for Disease Control (CDC) by the Trump administration during the COVID-19 pandemic that allowed it to close the border to migrants seeking entry into the United States. They also propose to use “coercive diplomacy” to encourage third party countries to accept migrants seeking to enter the United States. Finally, the Trump administration will likely invoke the Insurrection Act of 1807 so that it can deploy the U.S. military at the southern border with Mexico to apprehend, detain, and deport migrants seeking to enter the United States (Savage et al. 2023). |
19 | In 2020, the Supreme Court in Department of Homeland Security vs. University of California, et al. (Slip opinion, 2020) held by a 5–4 margin that the Trump administration had violated the Administrative Procedures Act when it tried to end the DACA program. However, the Court did not rule on the underlying legality of the law. Since that decision was rendered, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg, who was part of the majority holding, has died. She was replaced by a sixth conservative justice, Amy Coney Barret. Thus, a second Trump administration would likely revive its challenge to DACA, reasoning that the Court’s current configuration is more favorable to its efforts. |
20 | Several cases illustrate this point. The Supreme Court issued two rulings—Citizens Unite vs. Federal Election Committee (558 U.S. 310 [2010]) and McClutcheon vs. Federal Election Committee (572 U.S. 185 [2014]) have obliterated the already loophole-filled federal laws limiting the amounts of money wealthy individuals and private corporations may spend in political campaigns. These rulings have allowed the super-rich to exercise outsized influence on the political process when compared to average citizens in ways that distort democracy, even when large popular majorities favor policies that are opposed by the super wealthy. In Rucho vs. Common Cause (588 U.S. ___ (2019), the Court made it easier for state officials to gerrymander political districts by holding that partisan gerrymandering is a “political question”, which is not appropriately resolved by the federal courts. This decision not only reinforced a decade-long, nationally coordinated strategy of gerrymandering that distorts democratic outcomes in closely divided states, but it is handed down just in time for the 2020 census and the next round of redistricting. Even though majorities of Americans want government to enact sensible gun safety legislation and to take action to address the issue of climate change, the Supreme Court in New York State Rifle and Pistol Association (597 U.S. ___ (2022), and West Virginia vs. Environmental Protection Agency (597 U.S. ___ [2022]). However, no recent Supreme Court decision that is out of step with public opinion has generated more political pushback than Dobbs vs. Jackson’s Women Health Organization (597 U.S. ___ [2022]) that overturned the Supreme Court’s decision in Roe vs. Wade in 1973 that gave women the constitutional right to abortion. |
21 | This is traced to the Constitution’s original design, which gives an equal number of seats in the U.S. Senate to each state. While this has always created a small state bias, it has been aggravated over time by population growth and the expansion of the eligible electorate beyond the narrow base of white, male property holders who were eligible to vote in 1788. For example, California, the nation’s most populous state, and Wyoming, the nation’s least populous state, have an equal number of senators even though California is 80 times more populous than Wyoming. In fact, California’s population is larger than the combined population of the 21 smallest states. In other words, the more than 39 million people in those states have 42 votes in the U.S. Senate, while the voters of California have only two. Since the Republican party controls the majority of the nation’s smaller states (while the Democratic party is disproportionately an urban, large-state coalition), the GOP can control the U.S. Senate even while losing the majority of the national vote. In fact, because Republican senators come from so many small states, the last time they represented a majority of votes nationally was 1996. Yet, they have held the majority in the U.S. Senate in seven of twelve Congresses since then. For example, despite winning 18 million more votes in the 2018 congressional elections, the Democrats actually lost two seats (Frum 2022; Klein 2021; Levitsky and Ziblatt 2023). |
22 | The two most recent economic downturns—the 2008 financial crash and the recession triggered by the COVID 19 pandemic—are instructive examples. In part, because the U.S. dollar is the world’s default currency and foreign investors have viewed U.S. bonds as safe investments, it was easier for the United States to carry out the requisite borrowing that was necessary to finance the fiscal spending to stimulate the U.S. economy. As a result, the United States recovered much faster than the economies of other advanced industrial economies affected by the same global downturns. If either of these underlying advantages changes, foreign investors who hold U.S. sovereign debt will be able to charge the United States much higher interest rates than what is standard today. This change would dramatically increase the share of the federal budget that would have to be allocated for debt service. Such a change would force either dramatic cuts in government services—such as defense, social programs, social security, Medicare, and Medicaid—or require huge tax increases. The higher interest rates that the government pays would have cascading effects on the broader economy, raising borrowing costs for businesses and individuals. This is a nightmare scenario that would result in a dramatic drop in Americans’ standard of living. |
23 | Kevin Liptak, “Trump on China’s Xi Consolidating Power: ‘Maybe We’ll Give That a Shot Someday,’:” www.cnn.com, 3 March 2018. https://www.cnn.com/2018/03/03/politics/trump-maralago-remarks/index.html (accessed on 20 February 2024). |
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Samuels, A.L. The Last Democratic Election. Soc. Sci. 2024, 13, 588. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13110588
Samuels AL. The Last Democratic Election. Social Sciences. 2024; 13(11):588. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13110588
Chicago/Turabian StyleSamuels, Albert L. 2024. "The Last Democratic Election" Social Sciences 13, no. 11: 588. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13110588
APA StyleSamuels, A. L. (2024). The Last Democratic Election. Social Sciences, 13(11), 588. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13110588