Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
National

Sanders on U.S. election: 'Democracy must win'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Sep, 2020 08:34 PM
  • Sanders on U.S. election: 'Democracy must win'

Firebrand Independent Sen. Bernie Sanders is sounding the alarm over Donald Trump's refusal to promise a peaceful transfer of power next year.

In a speech in Washington, D.C., the one-time Democratic presidential hopeful calls that orderly transition the bedrock of American democracy.

Under Trump, he says, it is in danger like never before.

The sitting president on Wednesday refused to commit to leaving office should he lose the Nov. 3 election to challenger Joe Biden.

Trump also suggested, as he has been doing for months without evidence, that Democrats are trying to perpetrate election fraud by encouraging Americans to use mail-in ballots.

Sanders says Americans are not going to allow Trump to destroy the democratic ideals that so many of their fellow citizens have died for.

"We’re going to have to see what happens," Trump said Wednesday in the White House briefing room when asked if he would permit an orderly transition if he loses the election.

"We want to get rid of the ballots," he continued. "You’ll have a very peaceful — there won’t be a transfer, frankly. There will be a continuation."

The notion that a president can choose whether to stay or go is an affront to American values, Sanders said.

"There is nothing in our constitution or in our laws that gives Donald Trump the privilege of deciding whether or not he will step aside if he loses," he said.

"In the United States, the president does not determine who can or cannot vote and what ballots will be counted. That may be what his friend Putin does in Russia. It may be what is done in other authoritarian countries. But it is not and will not be done in America."

The coming election is not between Trump and Biden, Sanders said: "This is an election between Donald Trump and democracy — and democracy must win."

MORE National ARTICLES

Remdesivir approved for severe COVID-19 symptoms

Remdesivir approved for severe COVID-19 symptoms
Health Canada has approved the use of remdesivir to treat patients with severe symptoms of COVID-19.

Remdesivir approved for severe COVID-19 symptoms

Stigmatizing Hutterites will deter COVID response: Tam

Stigmatizing Hutterites will deter COVID response: Tam
Canada's chief public health officer says discrimination against Hutterites will not help build trust as some colonies across the Prairies experience outbreaks of COVID-19.

Stigmatizing Hutterites will deter COVID response: Tam

1 life sentence for man who killed Vancouver pair

1 life sentence for man who killed Vancouver pair
A single life sentence of 25 years in prison has been imposed on 27-year-old Rocky Rambo Wei Nam Kam for the murders of a Vancouver couple two years ago.

1 life sentence for man who killed Vancouver pair

HMCS Fredericton returns after six-month mission

HMCS Fredericton returns after six-month mission
Nearly three months after a helicopter crash claimed the lives of six crew members, HMCS Fredericton returned to its home port of Halifax Tuesday.

HMCS Fredericton returns after six-month mission

Probe of student program turns to Kielburgers

Probe of student program turns to Kielburgers
The co-founders of WE Charity argued before a House of Commons committee that the organization wasn't plucked to run a student-volunteer program because of any close ties to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, laying out details about how much the endeavour would likely cost and why the charity used a seemingly complicated structure to manage it all.

Probe of student program turns to Kielburgers

Quebec police watchdog probes woman's death

Quebec police watchdog probes woman's death
A 57-year-old woman died one day after she unsuccessfully sought police help to force her son to undergo mental health treatment, Quebec's police watchdog said as it launched an investigation into the incident.

Quebec police watchdog probes woman's death