Donald Trump has stated the only way Democrats can win is by ‘cheating’. Kamala Harris, on her part, has said she’ll ‘confront’ him if he prematurely declares victory. Fears of a ‘stolen election’ is no longer just Democrat, but democratic, paranoia. Even Trump supporters are scared there’d be rioting if Harris loses. Active measures, such as that of the (Republican) Virginia governor – green-lighted by a divided Supreme Court – to remove 1,600 persons suspected to be ‘non-citizens’ off the electoral rolls, have added to the atmosphere of a nation on boil.
Globally, the US, self-styled evangelist for democracy as mirrored in superhero movies, finds itself in a sticky position. It may no longer be about American democracy changing its goalposts, but shattering them. No matter who makes it to the Oval Office, the ‘leader of the free world’ taking on – or sermonising – nations that have gone off the path of liberal democracy or were never on it, is now liable to be taken less seriously. Because, like clarity, democracy begins at home.