Well, one thing you can say for Trump is that he’s driving a record number of faithful republicans away from the GOP.
A Georgia Republican activist and member of the electoral college said on Wednesday that he will withhold his electoral vote if Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump wins the state.
Atlanta Journal-Constitution columnist Jim Galloway spoke with Baoky Vu, a tech executive and one of 16 electoral college members who will cast their votes should Trump win Georgia in November.
Vu — a longtime GOP activist and organizer — said this morning that he is seriously considering holding back his electoral vote from the real estate mogul and former reality TV star.
“I have the right to vote for a write-in candidate in the electoral college,” he said in a statement. Georgia is one of 21 states that allow its electors to vote independently of the popular vote.
[…]
Baoky Vu’s statement in full:
I’ve been active in the Republican Party for many years precisely because it has championed the aspirational ideals of Lincoln, Reagan and Kemp. Our recent standard-bearers have proudly and honorably defended those ideas on the political battlefield. From Bush 41 to Romney to Jeb and many of the other 2016 primary contestants, there was never a wavering doubt as to their character, integrity and temperament.
Until now.
This is the Republican Party of Lincoln and Reagan and Romney and Ryan, not the Party of Donald Trump. As a 2016 Presidential Elector, I am forever grateful to our state Party and our Chairman for bestowing this once-in-a-lifetime honor on me. I take my role seriously and in the face of the difficult choice before us, I will always put America First over party and labels.
Thus, I will not be voting for Donald Trump in the general election. My conscience is clear but my soul is being tested. Born in Saigon, my family knows what it is like to lose a country and my family is forever indebted to America and our allies. I have never questioned the soul, character and goodness of the Nation by who we have chosen as our leader throughout history.
Until now.
Rather than earning the American people’s respect and trust through the duration of the past year, Donald Trump’s antics and asinine behavior has cemented my belief that he lacks the judgment, temperament and gravitas to lead this Nation. Throughout the process, he has hurled insults at our heroes and their families, denigrated the disabled and praised dictators. Forget political incorrectness, this is simply despicable demagoguery.
“In this time of global challenges, we will succeed only if we come together. We’ve done it before, from the courthouse steps of Appomattox to the days after Pearl Harbor. And to my Republican brothers and sisters in arms, politics should be a honorable sport. Rather than fighting to defend the indefensible, let’s live to fight another day.
Via Raw Story.
Siobhan says
Someone who thinks Reagan had good ideas think Trumpilthinskin is unfit for leadership.
Wow.
Caine says
Yeah. Speaks volumes, that.
johnson catman says
Yeah, I can’t say that Vu’s judgement should be praised.
Caine says
I think Vu deserves credit for standing up and doing the right thing, especially as the GOP has never been overly hot on doing the right thing.
Kengi says
I suspect they aren’t doing the “right thing” for noble reasons, but because they are increasingly concerned with the effect Trump is having on down-ticket races. It’s not like Trump has changed recently to suddenly become a demagogue. He’s been consistent.
Crimson Clupeidae says
Yeah, I’m with Kengi on this one.
The various rebellious individuals we are currently seeing in the republican party are more traditionally conservative (in the true sense of the word: Not wanting things to change). They are simply trying to hold on to their power within the structured hierarchy of the GOP, not out of any altruistic motive or thinking they are doing the right thing for a greater good.
Now, I think they probably think they are doing it for those reasons (and many in the GOP are masters of rationalizing bad behavior!) but it’s really all about holding on to power, in the way they are familiar with.
After all, that’s pretty much how authoritarians operate. And the GOP attracts a disproportionately high percentage of right wing authoritarians.
tbrandt says
Threatening to defy the popular vote--is he trying to validate Trump’s claim that the election will be rigged? The only way out of this is for Trump to be defeated in a way that everyone (at least, everyone except Trump) sees as free and fair.
Caine says
tbrandt @ 7:
I don’t know how you’re seeing rigging here. Rigging is secretive cheating, this is an open and public statement about one person’s voting stance.
blf says
Also, there is no federal requirement for the Electors to follow their state’s popular vote, albeit not doing so is extremely rare (but has happened). Some states having laws saying the Electors must follow the popular vote, but these laws have never been tested. (U.S. Electoral College — About the Electors.)