We are giving Doctor Crane the Monday off today because the aftermath of the 2020 Presidential election continues to degenerate to the point that positive words from Dr. Crane seem out of place today.
The U. S. Supreme Court made quick work last Friday of the Texas lawsuit challenging the presidential votes in four key states. One does not have to have a law degree to understand how this latest collapse of national norms is self-contradictory in a large manner and is a violation of the American system of justice in another. People who should know better are the instigators of two of these attacks.
Missouri’s attorney general is one of eighteen attorneys general who attacked the integrity of elections in those states.
But that’s not Missouri’s only involvement in the last-ditch efforts to overturn the results.
A resolution demanding that six key states prove to the Missouri legislature that their elections were run properly has been assigned to a committee of the Missouri House. It will be up to the outgoing speaker, who did not sign the resolution, to decide whether to spend state money and to recall the full House for a few hours to consider the resolution—-if it gets out of committee.
Many of those who think either of these actions is proper also are those who strongly support states rights. Yet Missouri is sticking its nose into the elections processes of some of its sister sovereign states, impugning the rights of those states to conduct their elections under their laws and to resolve any questions within those states. These states are under no obligation to prove anything to the Missouri House, which probably would loudly reject any suggested by any of those states that it prove to them that our presidential results were not tainted.
Imagine what backlash these actions could have.
What is to keep Mississippi from challenging Missouri’s gambling laws? What is to keep the attorney general of California from challenging a Missouri environmental law? Why should not the attorney general of Minnesota challenge Missouri’s clean water statutes? Why shouldn’t the attorney general in Arizona assert that suitcases full of pre-marked Trump ballots were spirited into local election officials’ offices and demand Missouri prove the assertion is untrue?
They can’t do that, you say. Yes, they can. The Golden Rule invites them to do so under precedents that now are being set. .
The results of the November 3 election have fueled a new Civil War that seems to say it is okay for one state to take another state to court because the first does not like a law in the second state.
The House resolution flies in the face of the cherished standard of innocent-until-proven-guilty. It assumes six states are guilty of fraudulent election practices and demands that they prove their innocence. Has this election so damaged the nation’s intellect that a foundational part of our justice system is invalid—or arbitrarily and selectively invalid, which is even worse?
Maybe we’re missing something here, but it appears this resolution signed by more than sixty members of the House of Representatives has extended their job descriptions to be a judge and a jury that already has passed judgement on other election returns in six other states. Would you, in the normal course of your daily life, think it’s a good idea that one of your neighbors can be a judge and jury pronouncing your guilty of improperly doing the family laundry and demand that you prove you did not?
Guilty, says the jury that is the Missouri House. Without a trial. Prove yourself NOT guilty.
Maybe there are reasons within the current political climate and the current administration that are driving these actions. A person who is even minimally aware of the current national political situation could construct some scenarios to explain these things and perhaps someday someone will reveal what has triggered this meddling in other states’ elections.
We would rather see Missouri’s officials paying attention to the problems of Missouri than becoming involved in a new civil war that pits states against states.
Or do we no longer believe in the Pledge of Allegiance’s description of one “indivisible” nation?