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Opinion: Advice to Trump critics and democracy lovers in the GOP: Leave the party

cigaretteman

HB King
May 29, 2001
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Opinion by Jennifer Rubin
Columnist
Today at 7:45 a.m. EDT



Matthew Dowd, a former Republican adviser to George W. Bush, is running for Texas lieutenant governor as a Democrat. Evan McMullin, former CIA officer and Republican congressional aide, is running for a Utah Senate seat as an independent. This is a sound trend: If you can’t beat the MAGA cult, leave.

There is scant evidence that any appetite exists in the GOP for independent thinking or pro-democracy critics of the disgraced former president. When Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) is booted from House leadership and ostracized while anti-Semitic mouthpiece and crackpot Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) remains a member in good standing, it is obvious which way the wind is blowing.
The sane faction of the GOP could probably fit around a dining room table. The House minority leader apparently does not believe he can survive politically without showing unwavering loyalty to the former president who incited a violent insurrection. Meanwhile, Senate Republicans think it is acceptable to vote to send the country into default but not to investigate the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.



Polls suggest the “fight for the soul of the party from within” is a quixotic dream. A recent Pew Research survey finds, “Two-thirds of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents say they would like to see former president Donald Trump continue to be a major political figure for many years to come, including 44% who say they would like him to run for president in 2024.”
Moreover, these voters are dead-set against Republicans who speak ill of the twice-impeached, racist authoritarian who tried to steal the 2020 election. Pew reports: “A 63% majority of Republicans say their party should be not too (32%) or not at all (30%) accepting of elected officials who openly criticize Trump, according to the new survey. Just 36% of Republicans say the GOP should be very (11%) or somewhat (26%) accepting of officials who do so.” While 55 percent of Republicans say “the GOP should be accepting of officials who agree with Democrats on some important issues,” no one can oppose the cult leader and remain viable in the party.
Republicans across the country — from California gubernatorial contender Larry Elder to Virginia gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin to the two Republicans vying for the title of “most unhinged MAGA” contender in Ohio’s Senate primary — feel compelled to mimic Trump’s insanity. This includes the former president’s aversion to democratic norms (e.g., easy access to the ballot, the sanctity of elections, adherence to objective reality).



There is virtually no chance a majority of the House Republican caucus would accept any Trump dissenters in leadership. There is every reason to be concerned that, absent significant changes in the Electoral Count Act, their crusades against fair elections and the stoking of the “big lie” will result in chaos, if not violence, if a GOP House majority is in charge of tallying electoral votes in 2024, when Trump increasingly seems likely to run.
Depending on the race, disgusted Republicans may want to cross over to run as conservative Democrats, fighting the smear that it is the party of “socialists.” Others will find it more productive to run as independents, either to beat the MAGA candidate outright or at least to split the GOP vote. If they run as independents in Congress, the disaffected Republicans might actually gain leverage when it comes to putting together a majority, making committee assignments and casting key votes.
Many well-meaning Republicans have tried in vain to shake the GOP from its Trumpian foundation. Finding no success, they now need to topple the MAGA party if they want to insulate the country from instability, authoritarian rule and possibly violence.

 
This would be a very interesting case study into what effect the death of the Fairness Doctrine, 25 years of FOX News, and over 30 years of Rush Limbaugh and other RW hate radio can do to a population.

The $64,000 question now is; can it be cured, and peacefully?
 
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We saw this when the Tea Party pushed out the moderate wing of the GOP. They were all replaced with nutbag right wingers. Then those right wingers weren't righty enough so the likes of Liz Cheney came along. Now those even nuttier wingers aren't wingy enough, so they are now getting pushed out for fvck bag MAGAts. You can see where this is going. Chis is right. The GOP is dissolving into the Taliban in front of our very eyes. This move would just push the Rs closer to this end.
 
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They need to do so their name doesn't go down on the wrong side of history, like benedict arnold and donald trump.

We are past that point, the GOP doubled down during a pandemic and took the stance that it would rather innocent people die than take even a semi intelligent path out. The history that’s going to be written will not be pretty, we have over 300k dead after the rollout of vaccines that were almost all preventable if not for ideology
 
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