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Republicans for Biden

We can now add Carly Fiorina to the list, it seems.

For those that won't read the article... here is a highlight that I think is most important.

Fiorina was a Republican candidate for president just four years ago, and was briefly Ted Cruz’s prospective running mate. Trump needs to go, she says—and that means she’s voting for Biden.

Fiorina is not going to keep quiet, write in another candidate, or vote third-party. “I’ve been very clear that I can’t support Donald Trump,” she told me, in an interview that can be heard in full on the latest episode of The Ticket. “And elections are binary choices.” She struggled with the decision, and whether to go public. But she said that this struggle is one Republicans need to have—including those who have rationalized supporting Trump despite their disagreements, because of some of his policies or judicial appointments.​
 
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Don't forget about Trump's niece who is even writing a book about how dangerous he is - When you don't even get family support, the wheels are clearly coming off.
 
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This guy gets it. Leaders with principles and character make better decisions than those without.........like whether to change the date for elections.

 
Slowly but surely people are seeing the real him, . . AND the real risks !

Conservative author and commentator Ann Coulter has soured on Donald Trump and took to Twitter last weekend to make sure he knows it. Coulter, who was an early champion of Trump’s and even wrote a book entitled “In Trump We Trust,” said she can’t commit to voting for the president in November.

“He’s a defective man,” Coulter said

Sadly for you, Biden is even more defective and prone to breakdowns, both mental & physical.
 
This guy gets it. Leaders with principles and character make better decisions than those without.........like whether to change the date for elections.


C'mon Bob, that's just stupid. The guy voted using absentee ballots, while he was in the military and he's trying to conflate absentee ballots with the voting by mail system the Dems are trying to implement. Apples & oranges

There is only one reason why Dems are so adamant about eliminating Voter ID and implementing vote by mail -- It makes it easier to cheat.
 
C'mon Bob, that's just stupid. The guy voted using absentee ballots, while he was in the military and he's trying to conflate absentee ballots with the voting by mail system the Dems are trying to implement. Apples & oranges

There is only one reason why Dems are so adamant about eliminating Voter ID and implementing vote by mail -- It makes it easier to cheat.
Lol. He LITERALLY......and that's an accurate word here, talked about absentee ballots for 10 seconds........and that was just to say he had done it 6 times. That's it!!!!!

I see you have gotten your talking points dialed in to trumps latest rants. The guy didn't conflate absentee ballots with mail in AT ALL. NOTHING. Listen to it again.

You.....lol.....actually turned a statement about who he was going to vote for into an argument about voting.......when that wasn't even his point and he barely mentioned it!!!! Man, you are one f'd up trumper.

Did you happen to hear what this 26 year veteran had to say about principled leaders who posess compassion, character, and take responsibility?
I thought not.
 
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Slowly but surely people are seeing the real him, . . AND the real risks !

Conservative author and commentator Ann Coulter has soured on Donald Trump and took to Twitter last weekend to make sure he knows it. Coulter, who was an early champion of Trump’s and even wrote a book entitled “In Trump We Trust,” said she can’t commit to voting for the president in November.

“He’s a defective man,” Coulter said
From what I gather from listening to people "on the street", the main reason to vote for president is whether he smiles a lot.
 
Another batch of former Republican members of Congress who just pledged their endorsement to Joe Biden

  • Sen. Jeff Flake of Arizona
  • Sen. Gordon Humphrey of New Hampshire
  • Sen. John Warner of Virginia
  • Rep. Steve Bartlett of Texas
  • Rep. Bill Clinger Pennsylvania
  • Rep. Tom Coleman of Missouri
  • Rep. Charlie Dent of Pennsylvania
  • Rep. Charles Djou of Hawaii
  • Rep. Mickey Edwards of Oklahoma
  • Rep. Wayne Gilchrest of Maryland
  • Rep. Jim Greenwood of Pennsylvania
  • Rep. Bob Inglis of South Carolina
  • Rep. Jim Kolbe of Arizona
  • Rep. Steve Kuykendall of California
  • Rep. Ray LaHood of Illinois
  • Rep. Jim Leach of Iowa
  • Rep. Susan Molinari of New York
  • Rep. Connie Morella of Maryland
  • Rep. Mike Parker of Mississippi
  • Rep. Jack Quinn of New York
  • Rep. Claudine Schneider of Rhode Island
  • Rep. Christopher Shays of Connecticut
  • Rep. Peter Smith of Vermont
  • Rep. Alan Steelman of Texas
  • Rep. Jim Walsh of New York
  • Rep. Bill Whitehurst of Virginia
  • Rep. Dick Zimmer of New Jersey
 
Got it. Thanks for clearing that up.

Can’t talk? No platform? No fresh ideas? No energy? No problem, as long as you’re “principled” and not Trump, that’s all that counts.

The only ringing endorsement for Joe at the DNC... well Joe’s a decent man...who took 3 months to condemn the riots and violence (oooh, wait, that was Joe’s VP)
 
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From a real conservative Republican.



OPINION
I was a Republican governor of Pa. I’m voting for Joe Biden. | Opinion
Posted: September 27, 2020 - 5:00 AM

Tom Ridge, For The Inquirer


I will cast my vote for Joe Biden on Nov. 3. It will be my first vote for a Democratic candidate for president of the United States. But it is not the first time I have said “no” to Donald Trump. I urge my fellow Pennsylvanians to join me.
I actually consider it a point of personal pride that I’m recognized for being among the first Republicans to reject Donald Trump. It was way back in December 2015. I told NBC’s Chuck Todd that day that I could never support Trump. I said then that he was an embarrassment to the Republican Party and our country. I said he belittles, demeans, and ridicules people who disagree with him, and that I’ve never thought that loud, obnoxious, and simpleminded solutions to complex problems are the kind of qualities we want in a president. I believe that earned me my first of several Trump tweets of indignation.
So here we are in 2020. And do we ever have complex problems that demand thoughtful, intelligent leadership. We are getting none of it. I cannot help but compare our current situation dealing with a global health pandemic to my time leading the Department of Homeland Security following the 9/11 terror attacks. There are many similarities to our national response. Those similarities, however, do not include presidential leadership.

Many of us remember when President George W. Bush, with megaphone in hand, stood on the rubble in lower Manhattan and told his fellow citizens and the world that those responsible for the brutal carnage of 9/11 would be held accountable. His remarks unified the country and his appearance on the mound at Yankee Stadium days later put an exclamation point on the message that America was resilient and would overcome.

Compare and contrast that with the crisis of today. Imagine the impact of President Trump traveling to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention back in February, and talking plainly about the challenge Mother Nature intended to throw at us, and how this country, working together, public and private sector, would confront it with all the fortitude and resources we could bring to bear. Then imagine him meeting with journalists the next day, appearing with a face mask, and calmly walking through the steps that his fellow citizens could and should take to do their part to combat this new challenge. Imagine the difference in attitude and outcomes. Perhaps I have more trust in Americans being able to handle the truth than the president.
Donald Trump has proven over these last four years he is incapable of such leadership. It is not within him. He lacks the empathy, integrity, intellect and maturity to lead. He sows division along political, racial and religious lines. And he routinely dismisses the opinions of experts who know far more about the subject at hand than he does – intelligence, military, and public health. Our country has paid dearly in lives lost, social unrest, economic hardship and our standing in the world.
“While I do not agree with many of Biden’s policies, I do know him to be a decent man who can begin to undo the damage President Trump has caused.”
Tom Ridge
With just about one month until Election Day, President Trump continues to claim the only way he can possibly be defeated is a rigged election. Can you imagine the hubris? Can you imagine any other president in our lifetime — or ever — saying something so dangerous and un-American? We are in the midst of a health crisis, when we should be doing all we can to help citizens vote safely, yet he continues to cast doubt on the sanctity of the vote. He’s done so multiple times here in Pennsylvania. It’s deplorable, yet utterly consistent with past reprehensible behavior.

Vice President Biden and I both know that supporting his candidacy now certainly won’t dissuade me from speaking out later when I disagree with him. But we surely will do so with civility and respect, not with childish name-calling and twitter tirades. Joe Biden has the experience and empathy necessary to help us navigate not only the pandemic, but also other issues that have fractured our nation, including social injustice, income inequality and immigration reform.
Whether the Republican Party can restore itself or not, I don’t know. Whether it wants to or not, I don’t know that either. But what matters to me is that the core group of conservative principles I held as a young man when I cast my first vote decades ago are with me today. They are the same principles exhorted by my party’s forebears -- Abraham Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan. Those principles have been indispensible to me in deciding to extend my hand of support to Joe Biden, who I believe absolutely must be America’s next president.


Pennsylvania voters, along with voters in Michigan, Wisconsin and Florida, are likely to ultimately determine the next president. So much is at stake. For me, voting is not just a privilege, but a responsibility. And this year, I believe the responsible vote is for Joe Biden. It’s a vote for decency. A vote for the rule of law. And a vote for honest and earnest leadership. It’s time to put country over party. It’s time to dismiss Donald Trump.

Tom Ridge is a former Republican governor of Pennsylvania and first U.S. secretary of Homeland Security.
The Inquirer’s Opinion pages typically do not publish endorsements of candidates written by individuals. However, the editors made an exception for this piece by former Gov. Ridge due to its news value.





Posted: September 27, 2020 - 5:00 AM
Tom Ridge, For The Inquirer




 
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From a real conservative Republican.



OPINION
I was a Republican governor of Pa. I’m voting for Joe Biden. | Opinion
Posted: September 27, 2020 - 5:00 AM

Tom Ridge, For The Inquirer


I will cast my vote for Joe Biden on Nov. 3. It will be my first vote for a Democratic candidate for president of the United States. But it is not the first time I have said “no” to Donald Trump. I urge my fellow Pennsylvanians to join me.
I actually consider it a point of personal pride that I’m recognized for being among the first Republicans to reject Donald Trump. It was way back in December 2015. I told NBC’s Chuck Todd that day that I could never support Trump. I said then that he was an embarrassment to the Republican Party and our country. I said he belittles, demeans, and ridicules people who disagree with him, and that I’ve never thought that loud, obnoxious, and simpleminded solutions to complex problems are the kind of qualities we want in a president. I believe that earned me my first of several Trump tweets of indignation.
So here we are in 2020. And do we ever have complex problems that demand thoughtful, intelligent leadership. We are getting none of it. I cannot help but compare our current situation dealing with a global health pandemic to my time leading the Department of Homeland Security following the 9/11 terror attacks. There are many similarities to our national response. Those similarities, however, do not include presidential leadership.

Many of us remember when President George W. Bush, with megaphone in hand, stood on the rubble in lower Manhattan and told his fellow citizens and the world that those responsible for the brutal carnage of 9/11 would be held accountable. His remarks unified the country and his appearance on the mound at Yankee Stadium days later put an exclamation point on the message that America was resilient and would overcome.

Compare and contrast that with the crisis of today. Imagine the impact of President Trump traveling to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention back in February, and talking plainly about the challenge Mother Nature intended to throw at us, and how this country, working together, public and private sector, would confront it with all the fortitude and resources we could bring to bear. Then imagine him meeting with journalists the next day, appearing with a face mask, and calmly walking through the steps that his fellow citizens could and should take to do their part to combat this new challenge. Imagine the difference in attitude and outcomes. Perhaps I have more trust in Americans being able to handle the truth than the president.
Donald Trump has proven over these last four years he is incapable of such leadership. It is not within him. He lacks the empathy, integrity, intellect and maturity to lead. He sows division along political, racial and religious lines. And he routinely dismisses the opinions of experts who know far more about the subject at hand than he does – intelligence, military, and public health. Our country has paid dearly in lives lost, social unrest, economic hardship and our standing in the world.
“While I do not agree with many of Biden’s policies, I do know him to be a decent man who can begin to undo the damage President Trump has caused.”
Tom Ridge
With just about one month until Election Day, President Trump continues to claim the only way he can possibly be defeated is a rigged election. Can you imagine the hubris? Can you imagine any other president in our lifetime — or ever — saying something so dangerous and un-American? We are in the midst of a health crisis, when we should be doing all we can to help citizens vote safely, yet he continues to cast doubt on the sanctity of the vote. He’s done so multiple times here in Pennsylvania. It’s deplorable, yet utterly consistent with past reprehensible behavior.

Vice President Biden and I both know that supporting his candidacy now certainly won’t dissuade me from speaking out later when I disagree with him. But we surely will do so with civility and respect, not with childish name-calling and twitter tirades. Joe Biden has the experience and empathy necessary to help us navigate not only the pandemic, but also other issues that have fractured our nation, including social injustice, income inequality and immigration reform.
Whether the Republican Party can restore itself or not, I don’t know. Whether it wants to or not, I don’t know that either. But what matters to me is that the core group of conservative principles I held as a young man when I cast my first vote decades ago are with me today. They are the same principles exhorted by my party’s forebears -- Abraham Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan. Those principles have been indispensible to me in deciding to extend my hand of support to Joe Biden, who I believe absolutely must be America’s next president.


Pennsylvania voters, along with voters in Michigan, Wisconsin and Florida, are likely to ultimately determine the next president. So much is at stake. For me, voting is not just a privilege, but a responsibility. And this year, I believe the responsible vote is for Joe Biden. It’s a vote for decency. A vote for the rule of law. And a vote for honest and earnest leadership. It’s time to put country over party. It’s time to dismiss Donald Trump.

Tom Ridge is a former Republican governor of Pennsylvania and first U.S. secretary of Homeland Security.
The Inquirer’s Opinion pages typically do not publish endorsements of candidates written by individuals. However, the editors made an exception for this piece by former Gov. Ridge due to its news value.





Posted: September 27, 2020 - 5:00 AM
Tom Ridge, For The Inquirer




You mean from a real Never Trumper. Ridge is little different from John Kasich.
 
Uh.....true conservative Republicans are never trumpers.

Real conservatives, or stable candidates in general, don't say the only way they can be defeated is if the election is rigged.
No Bob, Never Trumpers aren't Republicans if they are willing to support Biden-Harris, who promise to install the most left-wing administration since FDR. What kind of "principled Republican" votes for the Green New Deal, more justices like Sotomayor and Kagan, huge tax increases, defunding police, giving in to the Marxist mobs, etc.?

Trump is saying that he doesn't think he will lose unless the Ds cheat by harvesting votes, use fraudulent mail-in votes, count illegals, etc.
 
No Bob, Never Trumpers aren't Republicans if they are willing to support Biden-Harris, who promise to install the most left-wing administration since FDR. What kind of "principled Republican" votes for the Green New Deal, more justices like Sotomayor and Kagan, huge tax increases, defunding police, giving in to the Marxist mobs, etc.?

Trump is saying that he doesn't think he will lose unless the Ds cheat by harvesting votes, use fraudulent mail-in votes, count illegals, etc.

Or, some Republicans still hold true Republican values and are seeing those kicked to the curb with this sham administration. But PaRTy OvER cOUnTRY, right SD?
 
All valid points. Unfortunately, they are not really covered. I mean up until a week or so ago Cuomo in NY was the second coming. And his handling of nursing homes and Covid has all but gotten a pass outside a certain media outlet or two.

Lets not forget Cuomo’s super spreader event, allowing all NYers to go to their summer homes to quarantine. CT, RI, MA, PA NJ and FL were thankful. Now, Cuomo won’t let travelers in from any state that has high case levels, but in April he forced all neighboring states to allow infected NYers to travel to their states.

TY Democrats
 
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You do realize that the people who actually live in "resort areas" like the UP SUPPORTED Whitmer's ban, right? Those folks did NOT want people from the Detroit burbs coming up there exposing them to the virus and most importantly threatening to overload their rural health systems...

Not the people I know who own cabins in the UP, they hate Whitmer
 
No Bob, Never Trumpers aren't Republicans if they are willing to support Biden-Harris, who promise to install the most left-wing administration since FDR. What kind of "principled Republican" votes for the Green New Deal, more justices like Sotomayor and Kagan, huge tax increases, defunding police, giving in to the Marxist mobs, etc.?

Trump is saying that he doesn't think he will lose unless the Ds cheat by harvesting votes, use fraudulent mail-in votes, count illegals, etc.
Because they are voting on principles......the word you used......because principles are more important than policy at this point in our history. A democracy functioning as the framers intended is more important than any policy. I don't think most republican anti trumpers believe in the same dire predictions you do.......but even so, policies can be reversed and often are. The damage trump is doing to our republic can have lasting effects.

Are you spinning Trump's position to make yourself feel better or convince me?

He's already saying there are ballot issues. He's claiming we already have voter fraud and ballot box stuffing. He speaks of it as a certainty.......ergo the election is rigged. It's a self fulfilling prophecy. He can't lose unless the election is rigged.......all current information says that's not true........but he's already saying it's rigged because there is ballot fraud, that it's a fact.


Btw, why don't you explain how the Dems are going to rig the election in states with a republican SOS. Why don't you explain how all these mail in ballots going to dogs and dead people are only going to democrats. Why don't you give some evidence of this vast conspiracy of Democratic state officials across the country working together to defeat trump.
 
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