>Slightly more than half of Republicans say they would support postponing the 2020 presidential election if President Trump proposed it to make sure only eligible American citizens can vote
>If Trump and congressional Republicans proposed postponing the election to ensure only eligible citizens could vote, support from Republicans rises to 56 percent.
http://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/346000-poll-about-half-of-republicans-would-back-postponing-2020-election-if-trump
Are we truly seeing an end to the American Republic?
>>136839368
why is accountability and following the rules that already exist considered a bad thing now?
>>136840059
It depends who you ask
>>136841045
this.
Politics has become a system of resource redistribution to serve the constituents of whoever wins power. It has ceased to be, in the US at least, a system of any idealism or higher purpose outside of the self-interest of the represented demographics.
So whoever is in power doesn't give a shit about accountability and whoever is out of power cries REEEE for 4-8 years.
IT was like this under Obama, now it's like this under Trump.
I'm more curious how many Democrats would have wanted to postponed the inauguration in the interim after the election.
It's one thing to say that half of all Republican Voters are anti-American but you have to put that up against the other parties to understand if its an anomaly or if they're simply an accurate sample of the rest of the country
>>136843361
Republican party is the only one keeping republicanism alive. Most of this board is anti-republican. Republicanism is jeffersonianism: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CHjpmxxyow4
Why not go further and repeal the 22nd amendment so Trump can be appointed President for Life? The Democrats, and the left more generally, is so dangerous that we need to keep them out for as long as possible