At first, Donald Trump wanted election results on Election Night. Remember? He said he didn't want the result to drag out for weeks because it would be terrible for the country. So he fought the vote-counting for days until it delivered exactly what he feared—a decisive loss. Suddenly, he no longer cared about expedience but about "fraud," and naturally, only in the states and the predominantly minority counties he lost. Republicans stood by him, saying it was his right to challenge "irregularities." Now we're more than two weeks out, and Team Trump has failed miserably to present any such evidence in court. Yesterday, at a truly surreal press conference, his attorneys just came out and admitted it—they want to overturn the will of the people in the swing states Trump lost, and for the state legislatures to simply hand Trump a win. Just like that. Will it work? Very unlikely. But that's not the point. Aside from a few tepid statements from Republican officeholders, the party machine is going along, as are conservative media and many of the rank-and-file, because they now claim to be convinced of massive fraud. So let's call it what it is—an attempt to do deep harm to American democracy, which we'll likely spend years if not decades repairing. —Evan McMullin

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Dripping with disdain for democracy

Did you see it? Rudy Giuliani's 90-minute news conference yesterday, delivered not in front of a landscaping company in Northeast Philadelphia but at the Republican National Committee headquarters in the nation's capital, was a horrifying spectacle, including pointless movie references, jaw-dropping falsehoods about election "fraud," and sweating. Lots of sweating. Next up was attorney Sidney Powell, who after outlining a conspiracy theory regarding a scheme to alter votes through software, declared, "We are going to clean this mess up now. President Trump won by a landslide. We are going to prove it." The nation still awaits this elusive proof. —The Independent

MORE: Richard Primus: Why Michigan's top legislators should cancel that meeting with Trump —Politico

'Help is on the way'

The U.S. is seeing the fastest spread yet of the coronavirus, the White House Coronavirus Task Force said yesterday, at its first public briefing in four months. However, task force members spoke out against the idea of nationwide lockdowns, a sentiment echoed separately by President-elect Joe Biden, who said he prefers local action based on infection data.

MORE: Mnuchin to end key Fed emergency programs, limiting Biden —The New York Times

The Economist: How will the world look different in 2021?

"COVID-19 has not just pummelled the global economy. It has changed the trajectory of the three big forces that are shaping the modern world. Globalization has been truncated. The digital revolution has been radically accelerated. And the geopolitical rivalry between America and China has intensified. At the same time, the pandemic has worsened one of today's great scourges: inequality. And by showing the toll of being unprepared for a low-probability, high-impact disaster, it has focused more minds on the coming century's inevitable and even higher-impact disaster, that of climate change. All this means there is no going back to the pre-Covid world." —The Economist

So that's why he doesn't want to leave office

Sure, he likes all the trappings of power. But Donald Trump's desperation to stay in power is no doubt driven by what awaits him on the other side too. Mountains of debt obligations will come due, and two separate New York State fraud investigations hang over his head. The probes into his businesses, one criminal and one civil, have expanded to include tax write-offs on millions of dollars in consulting fees, some of which appear to have gone to Ivanka Trump.

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Gold: Whistleblowers may be democracy's last defense

"Looking ahead to this transition, abuses we may see will likely attack democracy by destroying or manipulating information. For instance, agency heads may seek to cover up paper trails of misconduct by failing to comply with record retention laws, or by removing or illegally trying to gag employees with access to information about wrongdoing who would likely challenge such misconduct. False information in turn can be used as cover for politically motivated executive actions, such as using baseless claims of voting irregularities to investigate alleged voter fraud; characterizing citizen protests as 'dangerous' to engage in voter suppression in the Senate run-off race in Georgia; or accusing foreign adversaries of aggression to justify armed conflict for a 'wag the dog' distraction." —Dana Gold in Government Executive

Dana Gold is senior counsel and director of Government Accountability Project's Democracy Protection Initiative.

Elections around the world

Well, at least we're not the only country with a contested election. But in Cote d'Ivoire, it's for good reason. The country's incumbent president, Alassane Ouattara, was purportedly re-elected to a third term last month, but his two main opponents boycotted the vote and have refused to recognize the outcome. Why? The Constitutional Court had ruled in September that only four of the country's 44 presidential hopefuls would even be allowed to run, and international observers have questioned the legitimacy of the results. —World Politics Review

MORE: 'Trump has been a kind of awakening': EU's top diplomat says Europe's relationship with US is forever changed —TIME

Taylor: Let's celebrate resilience...and save lives

"Let's be as bold in our thinking as this disease is in its deadliness. Let's let the numbers—the lost lives, the resulting grief, the unimaginable pain—order our steps as we move towards Thanksgiving. Mindset matters. Let's train our brains to not just seek but find gratitude, even in these dark days. Let's get audacious with our gratitude." —Kristin Clark Taylor in USA Today

Kristin Clark Taylor is a member of USA Today's Board of Contributors, an author, editor, and journalist.

"GOP, he used you to get elected. He corrupted the party and your 'principles' while in office. Now he's burning your party and the country down on his way out. Stop being cultists. Start being patriots." —S.E. Cupp, political commentator (@secupp)

I'm old enough to remember when Republicans would say that "good Muslims" needed to speak out against terrorists, otherwise they were complicit. In fact, they do it every time. They say all Muslims must condemn the actions of a few, or they are guilty as well. Muslims have to shout from the rooftops how wrong it was for a few of "their own" to attack our democracy, our country, and all we stand for.

A relative few in the GOP are attacking our democracy, our country, and all we stand for, yet many members of the group stay silent. Seems to me the "good Republicans" should be speaking out and shouting from the rooftops about what the stable genius and his sycophants are doing to our democracy, our country, and all we stand for. You know, just like all the "good Muslims" are supposed to do each time. —Bill T., Arizona

The views expressed in "What's Your Take?" are submitted by readers and do not necessarily reflect the views of the editorial staff or the Stand Up Republic Foundation.

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