The fallout over the nomination of Donald Trump as the GOP Presidential nominee continues. Many who have supported the Republican party for years are feeling left out in the cold. Those who have worked, given their time, efforts and money to the party are being replaced. Pushed out by an angry mob who’s ideals do not resemble that of what the Republican party was ever supposed to stand for as a group.
Like so many others, Chris Ladd could no longer stomach what was happening to the GOP. After years of dedication, including a blog called GOP Lifer, he resigned. He is not alone in this decision, as we see hundreds of lifelong Republicans walk away from the party they love over the takeover from Trump and his minions.
What will be left of the GOP after the dust settles is hard to say, but it is clear that it will be weaker both numerically and ethically. We can be comforted to know that those who still hold on to honor, virtue and the idea of what America really is, will continue to fight. They will just be wearing different hats.
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Chris’s letter:
Chairman Cuzzone,
We come together in political parties to magnify our influence. An organized representative institution can give weight to our will in ways we could not accomplish on our own. Working with others gives us power but at the cost of constant, calculated compromise. No two people will agree on everything. There is no moral purity in politics.
If compromise is the key to healthy politics, how does one respond when compromise descends into complicity? To preserve a sense of our personal moral accountability, we must each define boundaries. For those boundaries to have meaning, we must have the courage to protect them, even when the cost is high.
Almost thirty years ago as a teenager in Texas, I attended my first county Republican convention. As a college student, I met a young Rick Perry, fresh from his conversion to the GOP, as he was launching his first campaign for statewide office. Through Associated Republicans of Texas, I contributed and volunteered for business-friendly Republican state and local candidates.
Here in DuPage County, I’ve been a precinct committeeman since 2006. Door to door I’ve canvased my precinct in support of our candidates. Trudging through snow, using a drill to break the frozen ground, I posted signs for candidates on whom I pinned my hopes for better government. Among Illinois Republicans, I found an organization that seemed to embody my hopes for the party nationally. Pragmatic, sensible, and focused on solid government, it seemed like a GOP Jurassic Park, where the sensible, reliable Republicans of old still roamed the landscape.
At the national level, the delusions necessary to sustain our Cold War coalition were becoming dangerous long before Donald Trump arrived. From tax policy to climate change, we have found ourselves less at odds with philosophical rivals than with the fundamentals of math, science and objective reality.
The Iraq War, the financial meltdown, the utter failure of supply-side theory, climate denial, and our strange pursuit of theocratic legislation have all been troubling. Yet it seemed that America’s party of commerce, trade and pragmatism might still have time to sober up. Remaining engaged in the party implied a contribution to that renaissance, an investment in hope. Donald Trump has put an end to that hope.
From his fairy-tale wall to his schoolyard bullying and his flirtation with violent racists, Donald Trump offers America, a singular narrative – a tale of cowards. Fearful people, convinced of our inadequacy, trembling before a world alight with imaginary threats, crave a demagogue. Neither party has ever elevated to this level a more toxic figure, one that calls forth the darkest elements of our national character.
With three decades invested in the Republican Party, there is a powerful temptation to shrug and soldier on. Despite the bold rhetoric, we all know Trump will lose. Why throw away a great personal investment over one bad nominee? Trump is not merely a poor candidate, but an indictment of our character. Preserving a party is not a morally defensible goal if that party has lost its legitimacy.
Watching Ronald Reagan as a boy, I recall how bold it was for him to declare ‘morning again’ in America. In a country menaced by Communism and burdened by a struggling economy, the audacity of Reagan’s optimism inspired a generation.
Fast-forward to our present leadership and the nature of our dilemma is clear. I watched Paul Ryan speak at Donald Trump’s convention the way a young child watches his father march off to prison. Thousands of Republican figures that loathe Donald Trump, understand the danger he represents, and privately hope he loses, are publicly declaring their support for him. In Illinois our local and state GOP organizations, faced with a choice, have decided on complicity.
Our leaders’ compromise preserves their personal capital at our collective cost. Their refusal to dissent robs all Republicans of moral cover. Evasion and cowardice has prevailed over conscience. We are now, and shall indefinitely remain, the Party of Donald Trump.
I will not contribute my name, my work, or my character to an utterly indefensible cause. No sensible adult demands moral purity from a political party, but conscience is meaningless without constraints. A party willing to lend its collective capital to Donald Trump has entered a compromise beyond any credible threshold of legitimacy. There is no redemption in being one of the “good Nazis.”
I hereby resign my position as a York Township Republican committeeman. My thirty-year tenure as a Republican is over.
Sincerely,
Chris Ladd
There are many of you reading this, knowing that you are being pushed to support someone who does not hold your same ideals. You’re being told that victory is the only thing that matters, that you must overlook all the problems with your candidate and support the party. That itself is proof that Donald Trump is bad for America. It is not too late to stand up for what you believe, even if it’s against the tide all around you.
A win for your party should never come at the cost of the nation.
Join our #StopTrump task force today.
(Weekly conference calls with like-minded people who want to stop a candidate who is racist, sexist, bigoted, incites violence and is demonstrating no competence for the job at hand.)
Photo:Getty Images
Chris’s letter originally appeared on his blog, GOP Lifer


It happened with the democrats too after they lost the house with the contract with America. There are some people who just want to be on a winning team. It’s more political expedience.
The GOP hasn’t lost anything yet. They still control both the Senate and House. This election isn’t over. What you’re really saying is that they know this is a rat infested sinking ship of a dumpster fire and they are abandoning it before it goes under.
There is another option on the ballots of all fifty states. One with integrity and pragmatism. You have to ignore the false dichotomy being presented to you as the only approach to this election
Look for yourself and see.
And it appears that Gov. Johnson may make the debates.
Omg. And this couldn’t be said of Hillary? The DNC. The bs they pulled, yet you guys adhere to your faux ideals too. The two most unlikeable candidates to ever parade are here. Yet trump is worse to you than a supreme liar.
Is that an argument on why we should support Trump or just another straw man to justify your own guilt?
Why would I have any guilt? I didn’t do anything. I’m not saying you should support trump. But given the two I’ll take him over a liar any day. In general over the last 20 years, what real scandals has trump had? Hillary? I just think the Clinton’s are part of a world coalition to remove us as a power. I think trump is the fly in that plans ointment. Which is why the left hates him so much. And why they gloss over Hillary.
Yes, because everyone on the left wants to destroy America. If you haven’t noticed its not just the left that hates him. There are a great number of people on both sides of the fence that are terrified of what he is capable of. Your cognitive dissonance is showing.