Politics We’ve never backed a Democrat for president. But Trump must be defeated.

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SlyPokerDog

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By
George T. Conway III,
Reed Galen, Steve Schmidt, John Weaver and Rick Wilson

The authors are on the advisory board of the Lincoln Project.

This November, Americans will cast their most consequential votes since Abraham Lincoln’s reelection in 1864. We confront a constellation of crises: a public health emergency not seen in a century, an economic collapse set to rival the Great Depression, and a world where American leadership is absent and dangers rise in the vacuum.

Today, the United States is beset with a president who was unprepared for the burden of the presidency and who has made plain his deficits in leadership, management, intelligence and morality.

When we founded the Lincoln Project, we did so with a clear mission: to defeat President Trump in November. Publicly supporting a Democratic nominee for president is a first for all of us. We are in extraordinary times, and we have chosen to put country over party — and former vice president Joe Biden is the candidate who we believe will do the same.

Biden is now the presumptive Democratic nominee and he has our support. Biden has the experience, the attributes and the character to defeat Trump this fall. Unlike Trump, for whom the presidency is just one more opportunity to perfect his narcissism and self-aggrandizement, Biden sees public service as an opportunity to do right by the American people and a privilege to do so.

Biden is a reflection of the United States. Born into a middle-class family in coal-country Pennsylvania, he has known the hardship and heartbreak that so many Americans themselves know and that millions more are about to experience.

Biden’s personal tragedies and losses tested his strength, his faith and his determination. They were enough to crush most people’s spirit, but Biden emerged more compassionate toward the suffering of others and the burdens that life imposes on his fellow Americans.

Biden did what Americans have always done: picked himself up, dusted himself off and made the best of a bad situation. In the years since he first entered office, Biden has consistently demonstrated decency, empathy and humanity.

Biden’s life has been marked by triumphs that didn’t change the goodness in him, and he is a man for whom public service never went to his head. His long record of bipartisan friendship and cross-partisan legislative efforts commends him to this moment. He is an imperfect man, but a man who loves his country and its people with a broad smile and an open heart.

In this way, Trump is a photonegative of Joe Biden. While Trump has innumerable flaws and a lifetime of blaming others for them, Biden has long admitted his imperfections and in doing so has further illustrated his inherent goodness and his willingness to do the work necessary to help put the United States back on a path of health and prosperity.

Unlike Trump, Biden is not an international embarrassment, nor does he demonstrate malignant narcissism. A President Biden will steady the ship of state and begin binding up the wounds of a fractured country. We have faith that Biden will surround himself by advisers of competence, expertise and wisdom, not an endless parade of disposable lackeys.

For Trump, the presidency has been the biggest stage, under the hottest klieg lights in a reality show of his making. Every episode leaves the audience more shocked and divided. Trump’s only barometer is his own ego. The country, our values and its people do not factor into Trump’s equation.

Biden understands a tenet of leadership that far too few leaders today grasp: The presidency is a life-and-death business, that the consequences of elections have real-world effects on individual Americans, and that all of this — all of the struggle, toil and work — is not a zero-sum game.

The coronavirus crisis is a terrifying example of why real leadership looks outward. This crisis, the deaths and economic destruction are immeasurably worse because Trump and his administration were unwilling to do what was necessary to mitigate its worst effects and bring the country back as quickly as possible.

We asked ourselves: How would a Biden presidency handle this crisis? Would he spend weeks lying about the risk? Would he look to cable news, the stock market and his ratings before taking the steps to make us safer? The answer is obvious: Biden will be the superior leader during the crisis of our generation.

We’ve seen the damage three years of corruption and cultish amateurism can do. This country cannot afford to be torn apart for sport and profit for another term, as Trump will surely do. If Biden takes office next January, he won’t need on-the-job training.

We are in a transcendent and transformative period of American history. The nation cannot afford another four years of chaos, duplicity and Trump’s reality distortion. This country is crying out for a president with a spine stiffened by tragedy, a worldview shaped by experience and a heart whose compass points to decency.

It is our hope that when the next president takes the oath of office in January, Joseph Robinette Biden Jr. will be the president for a truly united America. The stakes are too high to do anything less.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/04/15/weve-never-backed-democrat-president-trump-must-be-defeated/
 

WE ARE REPUBLICANS, AND WE WANT TRUMP DEFEATED
The president and his enablers have replaced conservatism with an empty faith led by a bogus prophet.

By George T. Conway III, Steve Schmidt, John Weaver and Rick Wilson.

The authors have worked for or supported numerous Republican campaigns and administrations. This article was originally published in The New York Times.

Patriotism and the survival of our nation in the face of the crimes, corruption and corrosive nature of Donald Trump are a higher calling than mere politics. As Americans, we must stem the damage he and his followers are doing to the rule of law, the Constitution and the American character.

That’s why we are announcing the Lincoln Project, an effort to highlight our country’s story and values, and its people’s sacrifices and obligations. This effort transcends partisanship and is dedicated to nothing less than preservation of the principles that so many have fought for, on battlefields far from home and within their own communities.

This effort asks all Americans of all places, creeds and ways of life to join in the seminal task of our generation: restoring to this nation leadership and governance that respects the rule of law, recognizes the dignity of all people and defends the Constitution and American values at home and abroad.

Over these next 11 months, our efforts will be dedicated to defeating President Trump and Trumpism at the ballot box and to elect those patriots who will hold the line. We do not undertake this task lightly, nor from ideological preference. We have been, and remain, broadly conservative (or classically liberal) in our politics and outlooks. Our many policy differences with national Democrats remain, but our shared fidelity to the Constitution dictates a common effort.

The 2020 general election, by every indication, will be about persuasion, with turnout expected to be at record highs. Our efforts are aimed at persuading enough disaffected conservatives, Republicans and Republican-leaning independents in swing states and districts to help ensure a victory in the Electoral College and majorities that don’t enable and abet Trump’s violations of the constitution; even if that means Democrat control of the Senate and expansion of the Democratic majority in the House.

The American presidency transcends the individuals who occupy the Oval Office. Their personality becomes part of our national character. Their actions become our actions, for which we all share responsibility. Their willingness to act in accordance with the law and our tradition dictate how current and future leaders will act. Their commitment to order, civility and decency are reflected in American society.

Mr. Trump fails to meet the bar for this commitment. He has neither the moral compass nor the temperament to serve. His vision is limited to what immediately faces him — the problems and risks he chronically brings upon himself and for which others, from countless contractors and companies to the American people, ultimately bear the heaviest burden.

But this president’s actions are possible only with the craven acquiescence of congressional Republicans. They have done no less than abdicate their Article I responsibilities.

Indeed, national Republicans have done far worse than simply march along to Mr. Trump’s beat. Their defense of him is imbued with an ugliness, a meanness and a willingness to attack and slander those who have shed blood for our country, who have dedicated their lives and careers to its defense and its security, and whose job is to preserve the nation’s status as a beacon of hope.

Congressional Republicans have embraced and copied Mr. Trump’s cruelty and defended and even adopted his corruption. Mr. Trump and his enablers have abandoned conservatism and longstanding Republican principles and replaced it with Trumpism, an empty faith led by a bogus prophet. In a recent survey, a majority of Republican voters reported that they consider Mr. Trump a better president than Lincoln.

Mr. Trump and his fellow travelers daily undermine the proposition we as a people have a responsibility and an obligation to continually bend the arc of history toward justice. They mock our belief in America as something more meaningful than lines on a map.

Our peril far outstrips any past differences: It has arrived at our collective doorstep, and we believe there is no other choice. We sincerely hope, but are not optimistic, that some of those Republicans charged with sitting as jurors in a likely Senate impeachment trial will do likewise.

American men and women stand ready around the globe to defend us and our way of life. We must do right by them and ensure that the country for which they daily don their uniform deserves their protection and their sacrifice.

We are reminded of Dan Sickles, an incompetent 19th-century New York politician. On July 2, 1863, his blundering nearly ended the United States.

(Sickles’s greatest previous achievement had been fatally shooting his wife’s lover across the street from the White House and getting himself elected to Congress. Even his most fervent admirers could not have imagined that one day, far in the future, another incompetent New York politician, a president, would lay claim to that legacy by saying he could shoot someone on Fifth Avenue and get away with it.)

On that day in Pennsylvania, Sickles was a major general commanding the Union Army’s III Corps at the Battle of Gettysburg, and his incompetence wrought chaos and danger. The Confederate Army took advantage, and turned the Union line. Had the rebel soldiers broken through, the continent would have been divided: Free and slave, democratic and authoritarian.

Another Union general, Winfield Scott Hancock, had only minutes to reinforce the line. America, the nation, the ideal, hung in the balance. Amid the fury of battle, he found the First Minnesota Volunteers. They were immigrants. Many didn’t speak English. They were the very people the Know Nothings tried to keep out of the country.

They charged, and many of them fell, suffering a staggeringly high casualty rate. They held the line. They saved the Union. Four months later, Lincoln stood on that field of slaughter and said, “It is left to us, the living, rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced.”

We look to Lincoln as our guide and inspiration. He understood the necessity of not just saving the Union, but also of knitting the nation back together spiritually as well as politically. But those wounds can be bound up only once the threat has been defeated. So, too, will our country have to knit itself back together after the scourge of Trumpism has been overcome.

George T. Conway III is an attorney in New York. Steve Schmidt is a Republican political strategist who worked for President George W. Bush, Senator John McCain and Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. John Weaver is a Republican strategist who worked for President George H.W. Bush, Senator John McCain and Gov. John Kasich. Rick Wilson is a Republican media consultant and author of “Everything Trump Touches Dies” and the forthcoming “Running Against the Devil: A Plot to Save America From Trump and Democrats From Themselves.”

This article was originally published in The New York Times.

Follow The Lincoln Project on Twitter @ProjectLincoln

https://lincolnproject.us/news/the-urgency-of-defeating-trump-falls-to-all-of-us/
 
Lol yep. They’ve been the same never trumpers since 2015. They said the same bullshit back then. They even said they would vote for Hillary. Same shit, different election.
Lying assholes can be "Republicans" example...

"Biden sees public service as an opportunity to do right by the American people and a privilege to do so."

Get the fuck out of here. Say Biden is less of a POS than Trump and you won't look so foolish.

Just for the entertainment of it...

 
Lying assholes can be "Republicans" example...

"Biden sees public service as an opportunity to do right by the American people and a privilege to do so."

Get the fuck out of here. Say Biden is less of a POS than Trump and you won't look so foolish.

Just for the entertainment of it...


Jimmy Dore is not credible. He is a comedian described by CNN as follows:
"CNN describes Dore's show as "a far-left YouTube channel that peddles conspiracy theories, such as the idea that Syrian chemical weapons attacks are hoaxes""
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jimmy_Dore
 
Jimmy Dore is not credible. He is a comedian described by CNN as follows:
"CNN describes Dore's show as "a far-left YouTube channel that peddles conspiracy theories, such as the idea that Syrian chemical weapons attacks are hoaxes""
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jimmy_Dore
CNN is not a credible source. It’s political commentary for entertainment purposes, not news. They, like Dore, are commentators.

Jimmy Dore just happens to be a better one.
 
I read the headline and knew it had to be a bunch of neocons. I bet every one supported the Iraq War, and has probably pushed for every conflict since.
I doubt anyone here cares. They gleefully watch some retired general that now works for some baloney "think tank" with some generic name and CNN and Fox and the rest knowingly putting them on the air without telling us who funded the "think tank"...usually Raytheon or some other defense contractor.

Because companies like Raytheon give s little more than 50 percent of their campaign donations to Republicans. Maybe 60 cuz Democrats are for peace.
 
CNN is not a credible source. It’s political commentary for entertainment purposes, not news. They, like Dore, are commentators.

Jimmy Dore just happens to be a better one.
Jimmy Dore admits he's a jagoff comedian working out of his garage.

When Clown News Network admits what they are.....yeah right.
 
I doubt anyone here cares. They gleefully watch some retired general that now works for some baloney "think tank" with some generic name and CNN and Fox and the rest knowingly putting them on the air without telling us who funded the "think tank"...usually Raytheon or some other defense contractor.

Because companies like Raytheon give s little more than 50 percent of their campaign donations to Republicans. Maybe 60 cuz Democrats are for peace.

Hitler himself could come back to life and denounce Trump and Democrats (and neocon hacks in this instance) would be choking on his dong to get an interview or a retweet.
 
Yes, they definitely backed Jeb. That’s why they are so bitter about Trump. Same with that chic Navarro.
Conway backed trump. Weaver worked with kasich. I think wilson backed rubio. Dont see that any of them backed jeb
 
Conway backed trump. Weaver worked with kasich. I think wilson backed rubio. Dont see that any of them backed jeb
Wilson has a funny way of not supporting Jeb then

Wilson defended Bush on several questions and, unprompted, said: “I don’t work for Jeb Bush, and I’m not here to advocate specifically for him.” All the while, he threw a few bombs at Trump. “Every one of these pressers this guy does is a dumpster fire… most of the things that come out of Donald Trump’s mouth have almost no relationship to the truth under any circumstances. He just makes it up.” He wrapped up with a comparison of Trump’s talking point on forcefully taking Iraq’s oil to a “drunk dad at the local corner bar talking smack.”
 
“Every one of these pressers this guy does is a dumpster fire… most of the things that come out of Donald Trump’s mouth have almost no relationship to the truth under any circumstances. He just makes it up.” He wrapped up with a comparison of Trump’s talking point on forcefully taking Iraq’s oil to a “drunk dad at the local corner bar talking smack.”

Ok, so Rick Wilson was right about all of that. Maybe you should listen to him this time.

barfo
 
Donors I've talked to are desperate not to abandon Jeb because of their long bonds and loyalty with the family, but they are also recognizing there is no ROI [return on investment] on this campaign. The sense of these folks is it is so sad. They whisper to each other, 'When will Jeb go?'" —Rick Wilson, veteran Florida political operative and Marco Rubio backer,

Him bashing trump in your quote doesnt dispute anything I said. You're quick to lump them as heb supporters and frankly, they're not
 
I mean I get it. You guys want soooo desperately for Republicans to go against Trump. It’s like the wet dream of circle jerk.

here’s the truth. They’ve always hated Trump. Anyone thinking otherwise just living a fantasy.
 
Ok, so Rick Wilson was right about all of that. Maybe you should listen to him this time.

barfo
He’s dead wrong. He’s said Trump was gonna lose in November 2016. He’s been pretty wrong all throughout the Trump dynasty.
 
I mean, i get it. You wanted to further disparage a group that dislikes trump, so you felt like making a false statement would help that along. They DEFINITELY backed jeb. When they didnt. It didnt help your general point, and in my opinion, tends to hurt when you're happy to make false statements like that, or like Republicans wanting to adjourn. And then when you're wrong, you just slightly shift the topic or the reply.
 
oh For sure... God forbid I disparage the echo chamber of Trump haters. :lol:

Yeah, okay I made the mistake saying they endorsed Jeb. I forget Jeb only lasted until the SC primary. :dunno:

still doesn’t change the fact they were Never Trumpers since day one.
 
Well, not Conway.

And certainly none of them supported Hillary against him before.
 
Wilson has a funny way of not supporting Jeb then

Wilson defended Bush on several questions and, unprompted, said: “I don’t work for Jeb Bush, and I’m not here to advocate specifically for him.” All the while, he threw a few bombs at Trump. “Every one of these pressers this guy does is a dumpster fire… most of the things that come out of Donald Trump’s mouth have almost no relationship to the truth under any circumstances. He just makes it up.” He wrapped up with a comparison of Trump’s talking point on forcefully taking Iraq’s oil to a “drunk dad at the local corner bar talking smack.”

How does this prove anything? You think a Rubio-backer wouldn't "throw a few bombs" as Trump? Rubio was the one who made Trump defensive about his "small...hands."

You don't have to be a Jeb supporter to attack Trump.
 
anyone who thinks Trump has not lost support from the GOP is in denial....the GOP is only concerned with keeping the Senate majority at this point....Trump has insulted and fired hundreds of them in just a couple of years...he's shown his lack of leadership when we needed it most. winning against Clinton was his 15 minutes of fame...since then he's been flailing around and making his bizarre campaign speeches and clueless tweets...face it...he's been out of his depth from day one. I'm counting on the brightest scientists around the globe....the states and private sector to save the country rather than listen to this disgraced president who's thrown credibility in the trash for personal survival
 
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