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At 4 am (AEDT) on Thursday, 20 January, Joe Biden and Kamala Harris will be inaugurated as President and Vice President of the United States, replacing Donald Trump and Mike Pence. What follows is a discussion of the US political events over the past two weeks.
On 5 January, Democrats won the two Georgia Senate runoffs. Raphael Warnock (D) defeated Kelly Loeffler (R) by 2.0 percent and Jon Ossoff (D) defeated David Perdue (R) by 1.2 percent.
After November’s elections, Republicans held a 50-48 Senate lead, so these results enabled Democrats to tie the Senate at 50-50, with Harris to cast the tie-breaking vote. Democrats gained a net three Senate seats from the pre-November Senate.
On 6 January, pro-Trump rioters stormed Congress as it met to certify Biden’s Electoral College victory. The rioters were clearly influenced by Trump’s baseless claims of election fraud. Despite the riots and the courts’ resounding rejections of Trump’s claims, two state certifications were contested: Pennsylvania, which Biden won by 1.2 percent and Arizona (Biden won by 0.3 percent).
Just 64 House Republicans opposed the objection, so of those who cast a yes/no vote on objecting to Pennsylvania, 68 percent supported the objection. Democrats were unanimously opposed.
It is not just Trump or the rioters, but also these Republicans in Congress who objected to the certifications on baseless election fraud claims who deserve to be condemned for anti-democratic behaviour.
I had two articles for The Poll Bludger about Georgia and the anti-democratic nuttiness of Trump and Republicans. The first was a preview, while the second was a live blog on the Georgia results and the events in Congress the next day.
In response to the riots, on 13 January the Democrat-controlled House impeached Trump for the second time by a 232-197 margin. All Democrats and ten Republicans supported impeachment. It requires a two-thirds majority in the Senate to convict. Trump’s Senate trial will not start until after he leaves office.
Since the riots, social media companies like Twitter and Facebook have blocked Trump’s accounts. But for two months after the election result was called by the media, Trump was able to use his Twitter account to rant that the election was stolen from him.
In the wake of the riots, Trump’s ratings have slumped. In the Five Thirty Eight aggregate, 38.5 percent approve of Trump’s performance and 57.9 percent disapprove, for a net approval of -19.4 percent. His net approval has dropped nine points since the riots. Trump’s net approval is his worst since December 2017.
Five Thirty Eight has charts of presidential approval since Harry Truman (president from 1945-53). Two previous presidents (Gerald Ford and John F Kennedy) did not reach Trump’s four years as president. Of those who had at least four years, Trump’s final net approval is worse than all except Jimmy Carter at this point in their terms.
In a Marist poll, 47 percent thought Trump would be remembered as one of the worst presidents, while 16 percent thought he would be remembered as one of the best.
After results are finalised, I have published a detailed report on every US presidential election since 2008. My 2008 and 2012 reports are at The Green Papers here and here, and my 2016 report is at The Conversation. My 2016 report had a massive surge in views in October and November last year.
My 2020 election report, published 11 December, is at The Poll Bludger. Here are the highlights:
(This is an opinion piece and the views expressed above are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for the same. This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article here.)
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Published: 20 Jan 2021,04:19 PM IST