In Trump election fraud cases, federal judges upheld the rule of law – but that’s not enough to fix US politics

Photo by Ekaterina Bolovtsova on Pexels

Rudy Giuliani, lawyer for President Donald Trump, speaks on Nov. 19 at a news conference about lawsuits related to the presidential election. Sarah Silbiger for The Washington Post via Getty Images A healthy constitutional culture, in which the people and their leaders respect the authority of their Constitution, requires a baseline of trust in the government – a baseline that, in the United States, has eroded from 77% in the early 1960s to 17% today. This collapse of public confidence paved the way for a populist form of leadership that redirected public faith away from the institutions of go…

Read More

Related posts

Lower empathy partially explains why political conservatism is associated with riskier pandemic lifestyles

Queen Elizabeth II, Longest Reigning Monarch Of Britain, Dies Aged 96

Kansas abortion vote rocks US midterms outlook