Conservative Columnist George Will Leaves Republican Party Over Trump

Camille

Kitchen Wench #TeamQuaid
Staff member
http://www.nbcnews.com/politics/201...ll-leaves-republican-party-over-trump-n598961



Conservative columnist George Will says he's changed his party affiliation, and during a speech urged Republicans not to vote for presumptive party nominee Donald Trump.

"This is not my party," Will reportedly said Friday during a luncheon held by the Federalist Society, a conservative and libertarian organization.


Will, a longtime Washington Post columnist, Fox News contributor and former Ronald Reagan campaign worker, said House Speaker Paul Ryan's endorsement of Trump was one reason he decided to leave the GOP according to PJ Media, a conservative website.

In an interview after the event in Washington, D.C., Will told PJ Media's Nicholas Ballasy that he had recently registered as an unaffiliated voter in Maryland.

He said Republicans should refrain from supporting the real estate mogul.

"Make sure he loses," Will said, acknowledging that he thinks it's too late for the GOP to come up with another candidate but they can "grit their teeth for four years, and then win the White House."

NBC News reached out to Will for further comment.

In his most recent column, Will similarly wrote that Republicans "can save their party by not aiding its nominee."



"Trump's campaign has less cash ($1.3 million) than some congressional candidates have, so Republican donors have never been more important than they are at this moment," he wrote.

Will has been critical of Trump since the early days of his campaign, and Trump has responded on Twitter by calling the Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist "boring" and "biased." He also called him a "major loser" on MSNBC's "Morning Joe" in May.
 

Mrfreddygoodbud

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Trump maybe a self serving head so far up his ass he dont

know whether its day or night...

but I sure love the way he has the republiklans in shambles...

even though to be honest, it all seems scripted for a Hillary victory

but it sure is entertaining...
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Conservative columnist George Will says he's changed his party affiliation, and during a speech urged Republicans not to vote for presumptive party nominee Donald Trump.


Trump’s unraveling Republican Party:

How we reached this point
Leading Republicans say the party of Abraham Lincoln is facing disruption because in the past
few decades it has lost its commitment to 'unifying ideals,' such as freedom and human dignity


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Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump holds a Purple Heart given to him
by a veteran during a campaign event at Briar Woods High School in Ashburn, Va.,
on Aug. 2, 2016. Mr. Trump's denigration of a Muslim immigrant couple's loss of
their son, Humayun Khan – who died fighting for the American military in Iraq –
has triggered a backlash from some prominent Republicans.


Eric Thayer/Reuters


Washington — A report that the Republican National Committee is preparing for the possibility that Donald Trump might drop out of the presidential race has set the political world alight.

There’s no evidence that Mr. Trump, in fact, is on the verge of dropping out. But there are reports of deep discord within his campaign, and signs of an unraveling of the party’s fragile unity that had lasted through the GOP convention in Cleveland until now. The moment is so fraught with discord that major Republicans increasingly are giving up on the party altogether.

Trump's most controversial move was his repeated denigration of Khizr and Ghazala Khan, the immigrant parents of a fallen Muslim-American soldier, after Mr. Khan spoke out against Trump at the Democratic National Convention last week. But it's also an accumulation of brash moves – a daily unwillingness both to show the kind of restraint expected of a presidential candidate and to behave as a loyal Republican.

How has the Grand Old Party, founded in 1854 by anti-slavery activists, come to this point? It may not be all Trump's fault, though he personifies the problem. Leading Republicans say the party of Abraham Lincoln is facing disruption because in the past few decades it has lost its commitment to "unifying ideals," such as freedom and human dignity.

In recent days, a Republican member of Congress, Richard Hanna of New York, and a well-known business executive and Republican fundraiser, Meg Whitman, announced their support for Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton. Congressman Hanna is the first sitting member to endorse Mrs. Clinton.

Other stalwarts of the Republican establishment are beginning to write off their beloved party.

“I don’t think the Republican Party and the conservative movement are capable of reforming themselves in an incremental and gradual way,” Republican intellectual Avik Roy told Vox last week. “There’s going to be a disruption.”

Mr. Roy, a health-care expert and past presidential campaign adviser, said he believed the GOP had lost its moral authority to govern, because it was no longer committed to equality for all Americans.

And that was before Trump’s latest uproar.

A possible intervention

Trump’s decision to spend days verbally attacking the Khans may wind up being the biggest blow of all to his tenuous relationship with the GOP.

Trump exacerbated his schism with the party Tuesday when he refused to endorse Ryan and another senior Republican running for reelection, Sen. John McCain of Arizona. In another unusual move, Trump’s running mate, Indiana Gov. Mike Pence, announced Wednesday that he is endorsing Speaker Ryan.

"I strongly support Paul Ryan, strongly endorse his reelection," Governor Pence said emphatically Wednesday on Fox News.

Both Ryan and McCain had endorsed Trump, despite their clear discomfort with his candidacy over both his bombastic style and positions that don’t square with party orthodoxy.

But the Republican Party is a club, and the rules are the rules, unwritten though they are. When the party appears headed toward selecting a nominee, the party closes ranks around that person, for better or worse.

With Trump, there’s been a whole lot more “worse” than “better” lately.

It has reached the point where allies of Trump – RNC chairman Reince Priebus, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, and former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani – are reportedly plotting an intervention with the candidate to get him to “reset” his campaign.


But few have serious hope that Trump is really willing to change his ways. Trump has said that he knows how to be “presidential” – but chooses not to. His current shtick has taken him far, he says, so why change? He’ll be presidential after he defeats Clinton, he adds.

In other words, this Trump – the unpredictable, populist, mesmerizing, profane Trump – is the nominee, and the one the party will ride all the way to November. Or maybe not.

Word on Wednesday morning that RNC officials were contemplating the possibility that Trump might quit – leaving it up to the 168-member RNC to find a replacement – seemed to send public discourse into the realm of political science fiction.

But really, the idea that Trump may not last three more months as the GOP nominee seemed to reflect more the confusion and frustration of party leaders over Trump’s behavior than any real prospect that the hyper-competitive Trump might actually drop out.


How the GOP got here

The GOP arrived at this point, in part, by happenstance.

When 17 candidates ran for the Republican nomination, there was nothing the party leadership could do to winnow the field, and anoint an “establishment” favorite who could take on the outsiders – not only Trump but also Texas Sen. Ted Cruz. The “invisible primary” – in which fundraising, debates, endorsements, and poll numbers present an early picture of candidate strength – left the field large right up until the first caucus.

Trump’s distinct style and populist message broke through the clutter of the large field, and sent him to the top of the heap.

But a large field in and of itself wouldn’t necessarily lead to the potential demise of the Republican Party. It is Trump himself who is taking the GOP to the point of no return, some say. In the view of Avik Roy, it is the party’s dark racial past that has been its own undoing – a past that Trump has played to in courting white working-class voters.

Roy traces the problem back to 1964, when the party nominated Barry Goldwater for president – the original “movement” conservative. He calls Senator Goldwater’s nomination a “historical disaster,” because “for the ensuing decades, it identified Democrats as the party of civil rights and Republicans as the party opposed to civil rights.”

Michael Gerson, former speechwriter for President George W. Bush, tells the same story in a different way. He writes of visiting the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis on the same day that Trump was attacking the Khans. Mr. Gerson sees in that attack a repudiation of what Abraham Lincoln, the first Republican president, and the Rev. Martin Luther King stood for.

“Those who support Trump are setting the Republican Party at odds with the American story told by Lincoln and King: a nationalism defined by striving toward unifying ideals of freedom and human dignity,” Mr. Gerson writes.

Gerson suggests that Republican leaders repudiate Trump.

At this point, that’s unlikely to happen. Most Republicans say they’d rather stick with the nominee they have, no matter how flawed, than blow up the party before Election Day by abandoning him. But if Trump loses, a period of time in the wilderness may be beneficial to the party, they add.


SOURCE: http://www.bgol.us/forum/index.php?...ll-leaves-republican-party-over-trump.902666/



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QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator

'A sense of panic is rising' among Republicans
over Trump, including talk of what to do if he quits


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(Evan Vucci / Associated Press) Donald Trump’s relations with the Republican Party – and his political fortunes –
worsened dramatically Wednesday, as party leaders fretted openly about the inability of his campaign staff to control
him and even began to discuss what to do if their unpredictable nominee suddenly quit the race.

“A sense of panic is rising among GOP elected officials and operatives, said Ed Rogers, a former Republican White House official.

“Serious, senior lawyers” have begun researching how the rules would work if the party had to replace Trump on the ticket, a senior GOP figure in Washington with close ties to the party hierarchy confirmed.

Though the chance of Trump quitting remains extremely unlikely, the fact that Republican officials were conducting such semi-open discussions spoke loudly about how far panic has spread, prompted by Trump’s actions of the last few days: his extended quarrel with the family of a soldier killed in action, his pointed refusal to endorse House Speaker Paul D. Ryan and Sen. John McCain in their GOP primaries, and even less weighty matters like telling the mother of a crying baby to leave a rally. His volatility — and wishful thinking on the part of some — forced party leaders to reckon with any possible turn of events, including Trump ending his candidacy.

Republican officials can’t force Trump out of the race, and the strong support he still has from many GOP voters makes elected officials reluctant to publicly oppose him. But their plotting makes clear the extent to which he is likely to be running alone, without the kind of help he was depending on from the party’s more organized campaign apparatus.

“He just seems willfully destructive and willfully sort of sadistic about other Republicans,” said Rick Wilson, a Florida-based GOP consultant who has spoken out against Trump for more than a year. “Finally, people are like, ‘No more. We’re done. We’re not playing this game anymore.’”

All of the flareups point to a singular frustration: Trump’s refusal to take advice.


FULL ARTICLE: http://www.latimes.com/politics/la-na-pol-trump-republicans-20160803-snap-story.html


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QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Strategist's bolt from GOP a sign of Trump's impact of party · A longtime adviser to former Florida
Gov. Jeb Bush - and the co-author of the Republican National Committee's infamous 2012 "autopsy report" that focused on
making inroads with Latino voters - has left the Republican Party. "Donald Trump can not be elected president", Bradshaw
wrote in an email interview with CNN. She warned the Republican Party that if it doesn't change and reach out to voters
that often felt unwelcome in the GOP, they run the risk of losing major elections in the next four years, including the
2016 presidential bid.
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Congress, Strategy & Policy


Trump Would Be ‘Most Reckless’ President Ever:
Top GOP National Security Experts

Breaking Defense
By Colin Clark
August 08, 2016


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Donald Trump



UPDATED: Adds Trump Riposte

WASHINGTON: When a group of Republican national security experts signed a letter denouncing Donald Trump during the primaries, we didn’t report it because it was still intramural politics. Today, some of the most respected Republican experts in national security released a letter saying Trump “would be a dangerous President and would put at risk our country’s national security and well-being.” We’re in the end stages of the presidential campaign and this must be reported.

Among the signatories who say they “are convinced that in the Oval Office, he would be the most reckless President in American history” are: Tom Ridge, the first head of Homeland Security; Kori Schake, former head of strategy at the National Security Council; John Negroponte, the first Director of National Intelligence; William H. Taft IV, great-grandson of Republican President Taft and former Deputy Defense Secretary; Dov Zakheim, former Undersecretary of Defense for policy; his son, Roger Zakheim, former deputy assistant Defense Secretary; and Michael Hayden, former director of the CIA as well as the National Security Agency.

The authors say they “have doubts” about Hillary Clinton and will not vote for Trump. Among the reasons:

Most fundamentally, Mr. Trump lacks the character, values, and experience to be President,” the authors say.

He weakens U.S. moral authority as the leader of the free world.

He appears to lack basic knowledge about and belief in the U.S. Constitution, U.S. laws, and U.S. institutions, including religious tolerance, freedom of the press, and an independent judiciary.

“In addition, Mr. Trump has demonstrated repeatedly that he has little understanding of America’s vital national interests, its complex diplomatic challenges, its indispensable alliances, and the democratic values on which U.S. foreign policy must be based.

At the same time, he persistently compliments our adversaries and threatens our allies and friends.

Unlike previous Presidents who had limited experience in foreign affairs, Mr. Trump has shown no interest in educating himself.”​


Chris Collins, the first congressional GOP Trump supporter, told CNN today he didn’t care what the signatories said about Trump because they would not serve in a Trump administration and were the old GOP anyway. This is most revealing about the split in the GOP and shows just what a narrow ledge Trump stands on within the party. Other Trump supporters did the expected and pointed to Clinton’s actions regarding Benghazi, Libya and her irresponsible treatment of her emails while Secretary of State.

As someone who stays in touch with a wide array of current and former GOP congressional aides, I can tell you that many of them oppose Trump. Perhaps the most public of this group has become John Noonan, former deputy spokesman for the House Armed Services Committee. Noonan came out against Trump early on, expressing grave misgivings about his personality and comments. His views were heavily colored by his service as a former Air Force missileer, one of the guys who turns the firing keys of the nation’s ICBMs. Then last week Noonan just couldn’t stand it anymore and issued a detailed 20-tweet condemnation of Trump’s views, fueled by reports from MSNBC “Morning Joe” host Joe Scarborough, a former GOP member of Congress, that Trump had asked a briefer why we didn’t use nuclear weapons when we have them. We won’t detail Trump’s comments on NATO, Vlad Putin, Russia, Crimea and Ukraine as they are well known.

Given that there is no role more important for a president than that of Commander in Chief, these public misgivings from experts within his own party must be aired.

UPDATE: Here’s Trump’s response:

“The names on this letter are the ones the American people should look to for answers on why the world is a mess, and we thank them for coming forward so everyone in the country knows who deserves the blame for making the world such a dangerous place. They are nothing more than the failed Washington elite looking to hold onto their power, and it’s time they are held accountable for their actions.

“These insiders — along with Hillary Clinton — are the owners of the disastrous decisions to invade Iraq, allow Americans to die at Benghazi, and they are the ones who allowed the rise of ISIS. Yet despite these failures, they think they are entitled to use their favor trading to land taxpayer-funded government contracts and speaking fees.”

SOURCE: http://breakingdefense.com/2016/08/...ident-ever-top-gop-national-security-experts/



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