The Eldctoral College voted for Trump over Hillary and Congress certified this result.
Perfectly legitimate election as far as the Constitution is concerned.
As far as the Constitution is concerned, sure. And as far as the Constitution is concerned the census for 1850 is legitimate despite slavery and Three-Fifths. A perennial issue in Puerto Rico is whether or not the territory should become a state. As I recall, the "No" side was expecting to lose in some referendum and urged voters to go to the beach. Have a barbecue.
Don't vote. Do anything except vote. Which would discourage the "Yes" people from voting. When "Yes" inevitably prevailed, the "No" people could say, "But only [some small percentage] of eligible voters participated, and we can't change our system of government for that." Popular elections lend themselves to legitimacy. The consent of the governed. In 2016, Trump won approximately 26% of eligible voters. Clinton did not do much better (about 28%). We're not Sweden, so getting Americans to perform their civic duty is like expecting dogs to play piano, but declaring the person who got the
second most votes is bonkers stupid. Incandescently stupid. The only way our system could be dumber is if the person with the second most Electoral College votes was made the Vice President.
The current environment is scary-bad because Trump, who tried to steal an election, has tens of millions of supporters who believe
he's the victim. His loss in the EC was identical to 2016, which he called a "landslide," and he lost the popular vote by almost eight digits. Plus, PLUS, he was an
incumbent who lost to
Joe Biden. I know, everybody here already knows this, but it's beyond frustrating and tomorrow is Monday.