The "big lie" is back in style. Wikipedia tells us that the term was invented by Adolf Hitler to describe what other did — though he was the biggest liar of all. “The broad masses of a nation,” he wrote in Mein Kampf, “more readily fall victims to the big lie than the small lie.”

No one on the political scene in this country or any democratic nation is a monster comparable to Hitler. But some have resorted to the big lie in their attempts to override clear decisions of the people, at the risk of delegitimizing the nation’s democracy.

Exhibit A: The increasingly common claims that Democrats Stacey Abrams and Andrew Gillum “won” last fall’s elections for governor in Georgia and Florida. Actually, both of them lost by 50%-49% margins.

Abrams admits this, but insists that “so many people were disenfranchised and disengaged ... that I feel comfortable now saying, ‘I won.’” “Without voter suppression,” presidential candidate Kamala Harris told the Detroit NAACP, “Stacey Abrams would be the governor of Georgia, Andrew Gillum is the governor of Florida.”

This is nonsense. Voter turnout was up 54% in Georgia and 38% in Florida over 2014 levels. And the “voter suppression” that people are complaining about was standard procedure, required by longstanding federal and state laws.

The suggestion that anything happened in Georgia or Florida tantamount to the voter suppression blacks experienced before the 1965 Voting Rights Act — suppression by unfair laws, threats of violence and murder — is preposterous. Perhaps Abrams hopes to convince the many blacks moving to Georgia that it’s run by white segregationists, or to discourage people from voting by making them think their vote won't count. But she and those who echo her charges are saying that America is moving backward on basic civil rights. That’s a big lie, one that stokes racial mistrust and hatred.

Exhibit B: The claims that Donald Trump and his 2016 campaign colluded with the Russians. Perhaps there was reason to believe this two or three years ago, from candidate Donald Trump’s refusals to condemn Vladimir Putin and from his proposed Moscow hotel. His behavior was downright weird in this regard, inviting all sorts of questions.

But the absurdity of much in the Steele dossier, and the fact that it was paid for by the Clinton campaign, should have sent up the early warning flags. The argument that a few Russian bot Facebook ads could have swung the election was always a flimsy one.

Even so, it was a rude shock to MSNBC and CNN viewers when Attorney General William Barr accurately reported that special counsel Robert Mueller found no evidence of Trump colluding with Russia.

Two months later, Democrats are still itching to impeach Trump on some pretext, and many want to rake over the cold coals once more to somehow get a flame going. But it’s apparent now that the collusion charges were a big lie, promoted by top Obama administration officials, who either deliberately or recklessly broke the rule that U.S. intelligence and law enforcement agencies ordinarily shouldn’t interfere in elections.

Exhibit C: Hop down to Australia, where contrary to polls and universal expectations, the center-right Liberal/National government last weekend beat the center-left Labor party. Voters’ rejection of Labor’s carbon tax to address climate change and its higher taxes on high earners and retirees particularly rankled the nation’s cosmopolitan commentators.

The big lie here was that modest-income voters — “trade workers, barmaids, cleaners and labourers,” in Quillette editor Clare Lehmann’s description — are voting irrationally, against their own short-term economic interest. Wasn’t Labor promising to funnel rich people’s money to them?

We hear the same condescending analyses from coastal critics of Rust Belt Trump voters and metropolitan London critics of British Brexit voters. How dare they not follow the guidance of their sophisticated superiors? They must be stupid or vicious, idiots or bigots.

The obvious reply is that these voters, like their critics who vote for politicians who promise to raise their taxes, value some things more than marginal short-term economic gain. They will cheerfully forgo short-term gains and prefer policies they believe are better in the long term for them and their country.

And they have some reason to discount the sophisticates’ expertise and to suspect their motives. The Bank of England predicted Brexit would wreck the economy. Instead, Britain is now growing at about the same rate as continental Europe — a bit faster if you look back a few quarters. The New York Times’ Paul Krugman predicted the stock market would fall “forever” after Donald Trump won. Has he checked his 401(k) lately?

From Atlanta to Adelaide, from the Steele dossier to the Brexit opponents, the big lie is being deployed in the service of delegitimizing the results of elections. But as one observer said, refusing to “respect the results” of an election is “threatening our democracy.” That was Hillary Clinton, tweeting on Oct. 21, 2016.