Lt. Gov. Henderson: The 2024 Election is Not an Existential Threat to Democracy
During a speech near the fabled Revolutionary encampment at Valley Forge, President Joe
Biden drew a parallel between the embattled continental army—exhausted but not
defeated patriots placing their lives and fortunes on the altar of liberty—and today’s
embittered political landscape. This November, he said, “Democracy is on the ballot. Your
freedom is on the ballot.” Two weeks later at a rally in New Hampshire, former President
Donald Trump declared that “Joe Biden is a threat to democracy.”
Pundits and politicians across the ideological spectrum have warned that the 2024
election could be our last; our country is facing an existential crisis and may not survive
long past November.
They are all wrong.
No matter who wins the White House this year, 2024 will not be our nation’s last election.
Democracy will not die if the Republican wins. The republic will survive if the Democrat
wins.
In his first inaugural address, Abraham Lincoln acknowledged that his election as president
had given seven states in the Deep South a “pretext” to rebel. To the so-called border states
that might be persuaded to remain in the Union, Lincoln offered reassurance. Presidents
come and go, but the country and its government belong to the American people. So long
as “the people retain their virtue and vigilance,” Lincoln promised, “no administration, by
any extreme of wickedness or folly, can very seriously injure the government in the short
space of four years.”
It’s true that presidents can have a lasting impact for good or bad on the country. I’m not
suggesting that the 2024 presidential election doesn’t matter. It does. But the arc of
American History spans eras much wider than a presidential term. Our nation has endured
civil and world wars, economic and natural disasters, internal and external attacks, and
strident division. Yet despite the perils and missteps along the way, We the People are still
marching, however imperfectly, toward the horizon of our more perfect union. No setback
or roadblock or election loss will stop us.
The key to our forward momentum was taught by Lincoln over and over: virtue. A virtuous
people are those who not only believe in the fundamental principles set forth in our
founding documents, but also believe it is their duty to secure those rights for others and
preserve them for future generations. A virtuous people see the humanity in one another,
even when they disagree. A virtuous people believe, like Lincoln, that ballots are better than
bullets, and “what they cannot take by an election, neither can they take it by a war.”
Recent reports have confirmed the disturbing trend of political violence and threats since
the 2020 election. Not only have actual threats to elected officials dramatically increased,
but so too has the general acceptance of and support for political violence among the right
and left. This should alarm every rational American.
It is said that politicians mirror the people, but it is also true that the people reflect what
they see in their politicians. Since we mirror one another, we each bear some responsibility
for the beauty and ugliness in our nation. As November approaches, be aware of politicians
who use the tactics of fear and division to mobilize support. Reject the poison of conflict
entrepreneurs who weaponize victimhood to exploit the worst qualities of our human
nature. Resolve today to honor the outcome of the election, whatever it may be.
Regardless of who occupies the White House, we, the American people, must open our
hearts to “the better angels of our nature” and individually commit to embody Lincoln’s
ideas of virtue; treating others with charity, not malice, accepting the results of free and fair
elections, winning with grace, losing with dignity, and understanding that neither victory nor
defeat is permanent—there is always another election around the corner.