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Here’s How to Make Republicans Abandon Their Party

A growing number are keeping distance from toxic Trump


Republicans were hoping for unity around Donald Trump after he effectively locked up the nomination, but with less than a month to go before the convention, togetherness is in short supply for the GOP.

First, there are outright defections from the party. Sure, the people who are publicly refusing to vote for Trump are not sitting politicians, but these are still significant members of the party, and this sort of open dissent has no modern precedent.

And as the election rages on, there could well be new additions to this club, particularly among politicians who face tough reelections.

What may be more significant is the number of high-profile GOP politicians who have said they won’t attend the convention in July or they won’t speak at it, a clear sign that they don’t want their names associated with the person who would normally be considered the head of their party.

 

Who has actually left the party?

That depends on what you mean by “left.”

The biggest name to actually change registration from Republican because of Trump is columnist George Will, a Pulitzer-Prize winner. He reportedly declared the GOP “not my party” at an event because it nominated Trump, a man he’s routinely criticized.

Many people have no idea who George Will actually is, and thus couldn’t care less.

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And obviously your average Trump voter would actually cheer on his exit as just another establishment casualty.

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It was undoubtedly Stephen Colbert who had the best jokes about it, though.

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The other group of defectors in this category is Republicans who have not sworn off being a Republican but have declared they’ll vote for Hillary Clinton. This includes Former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, who served under George W. Bush, former top-level George W. Bush official Richard Armitrage, and Brent Scowcroft, a top national security adviser for a number of Republican presidents going back to Gerald Ford.

Admittedly that’s not a roster of well-known people.

Then there’s the people who won’t endorse or vote for him, which, so far, includes:

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Who has said they won’t speak at the Republican Convention?

Equally bad for Trump is that many Republicans have said they’re not interested in speaking at the GOP Convention this year, because typically you’d have to fight for such a platform and it’s considered an ideal springboard to national prominence.

And many more have said they’re skipping the convention altogether.

As Politico and others have reported, there are a notable number of GOP heavy hitters sitting out the convention or saying they won’t speak on Trump’s behalf.

 

Will any of this matter?

That’s the real question. Obviously Trump thrives on anti-establishment sentiment, and his voters don’t give a damn about whether John Cornyn will attend the GOP Convention. They don’t give a damn about their being a GOP Convention, for that matter.

The problem for him will be with whipping up enthusiasm for undecided voters – particularly independents – who still find Trump alarming, because everything that I just laid out only serves to underscore the idea that he’s a joke in human form.

That will probably remain his key problem all the way to Nov. 2.

 

Image: Flickr