Why Trump is Not a Republican
John C. Danforth was a Republican U.S. senator from Missouri from 1976 to 1995.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/trump-is-exactly-what-republicans-are-not/2017/08/24/9909a320-8832-11e7-a50f-e0d4e6ec070a_story.html?utm_term=.088fb8bab94a
Many
have said that President Trump isn’t a Republican. They are correct,
but for a reason more fundamental than those usually given. Some focus
on Trump’s differences from mainstream GOP policies, but the party is
broad enough to embrace different views, and Trump agrees with most
Republicans on many issues. Others point to the insults he regularly
directs at party members and leaders, but Trump is not the first to
promote self above party. The fundamental reason Trump isn’t a
Republican is far bigger than words or policies. He stands in opposition
to the founding principle of our party — that of a united country.
We
are the party of Abraham Lincoln, and our founding principle is our
commitment to holding the nation together. This brought us into being
just before the Civil War. The first resolution of the platform at
the party’s first national convention states in part that “the union of
the States must and shall be preserved.” The issue then was whether we
were one nation called the United States or an assortment of sovereign
states, each free to go its own way. Lincoln believed that we were one
nation, and he led us in a war to preserve the Union.
That
founding principle of the party is also a founding principle of the
United States. Even when we were a tiny fraction of our present size and
breadth, the framers of our Constitution understood the need for
holding ourselves together, whatever our differences. They created a
constitutional structure and a Bill of Rights that would accommodate
within one nation all manner of interests and opinions. Americans honor
that principle in the national motto on the presidential seal: “e
pluribus unum” — “out of many, one.” Today, the United States is far
more diverse than when we were a nation of 3 million people , but the
principle remains the same: We are of many different backgrounds,
beliefs, races and creeds, and we are one.
The Republican Party
has a long history of standing for a united country. Theodore Roosevelt
raised up the ordinary people of his day and championed their cause
against abusive trusts. Dwight Eisenhower used the army to integrate a
Little Rock high school. George H.W. Bush signed the most important civil rights legislation in
more than a quarter-century, a bill authored by Republican senators.
George W. Bush stood before Congress and the nation and defended Muslims
after 9/11. Our record hasn’t been perfect. When we have pushed the
agenda of the Christian right, we have seemed to exclude people who
don’t share our religious beliefs. We have seemed unfriendly to gay
Americans. But our long history has been to uphold the dignity of all of
God’s people and to build a country welcoming to all.
Now
comes Trump, who is exactly what Republicans are not, who is exactly
what we have opposed in our 160-year history. We are the party of the
Union, and he is the most divisive president in our history. There
hasn’t been a more divisive person in national politics since George
Wallace.
It
isn’t a matter of occasional asides, or indiscreet slips of the tongue
uttered at unguarded moments. Trump is always eager to tell people that
they don’t belong here, whether it’s Mexicans, Muslims, transgender
people or another group. His message is, “You are not one of us,” the
opposite of “e pluribus unum.” And when he has the opportunity to unite
Americans, to inspire us, to call out the most hateful among us, the KKK
and the neo-Nazis, he refuses.
To my
fellow Republicans: We cannot allow Donald Trump to redefine the
Republican Party. That is what he is doing, as long as we give the
impression by our silence that his words are our words and his actions
are our actions. We cannot allow that impression to go unchallenged.
As
has been true since our beginning, we Republicans are the party of
Lincoln, the party of the Union. We believe in our founding principle.
We are proud of our illustrious history. We believe that we are an
essential part of present-day American politics. Our country needs a
responsibly conservative party. But our party has been corrupted by this
hateful man, and it is now in peril.
In
honor of our past and in belief in our future, for the sake of our
party and our nation, we Republicans must disassociate ourselves from
Trump by expressing our opposition to his divisive tactics and by
clearly and strongly insisting that he does not represent what it means
to be a Republican.
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1 Comments:
Corey: The Dems are likely to pick-up Drumthwacket in NJ come November 7th.
VA is a Wild Card.
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