It’s Trump’s party now: Another GOPer quits, laments Trumpist takeover
WASHINGTON — A first-term conservative lawmaker announced his abrupt retirement from the U.S. Senate in a dramatic speech Tuesday, in which he bemoaned what he called the reckless, abnormal, undignified and un-American behaviour of the Trump-era Republican party.
Jeff Flake of Arizona’s statement read as an admission of the undeniable shift in the party’s balance of power: he conceded that he would have struggled to win his own party’s nomination next year, given the target on his back over his frequent criticisms of a president beloved by the rank-and-file.
He urged his peers to show some courage and speak out. He bemoaned not only the president’s behaviour, but also policies he called a betrayal of core Republican beliefs like free trade, immigration and the international institutions America helped build after the Second World War.
It followed similar warnings from former GOP stalwarts George W. Bush and John McCain, who in recent days both delivered speeches about the turn to nativism, protectionism and degrading language of the modern-day party.