Even as the GOP moved to purge Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming from the ranks of its leadership, a group of former officials is giving the party one last chance to clean up its act.
As one signer of the manifesto explained, the goal is either to “restore or replace the current Republican Party.”
The manifesto is a ringing endorsement of truth, democracy, the Constitution and the rule of law.
The new coalition includes more than 100 Republicans, including former Massachusetts Gov. Bill Weld, former Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Ridge, and former New Jersey Gov. Christine Todd Whitman. Other signatories included Ambassador Jim Glassman, former Secretary of Transportation Mary Peters, former Director of Homeland Security Michael Chertoff, and the former chairman of the Republican National Committee, and fellow MSNBC columnist Michael Steele. The list also included former GOP congressmen, including Reid Ribble and Tom Petri of Wisconsin, Mickey Edwards of Oklahoma, Joe Walsh of Illinois, Bob Inglis of South Carolina, Barbara Comstock and Denver Riggleman of Virginia and Charlie Dent of Pennsylvania.
The “Call for Renewal” is a pledge to “either reimagine a party dedicated to our founding ideals or else hasten the creation of such an alternative.” The manifesto is a ringing endorsement of truth, democracy, the Constitution and the rule of law.
“We oppose the employment of fear-mongering, conspiracism, and falsehoods and instead support evidence-based policymaking and honest discourse,” it declares.
But, at least for the moment, many signatories are unwilling to cut loose. Some of the leaders argued last week in the Washington Post that “America cannot have just one party committed to preservation of its democratic institutions. There must be at least two, if not more.”
That true, and I’m with them. I signed the manifesto too. Millions of political orphans need a new home.
But let’s be honest: it’s not going to be in the Republican Party. To think otherwise is tilting at windmills.
It would be nice to think that a group of former Republican officeholders — folks who have won state and national elections — would be able to make one last stand to save the party from the extremists and the cranks.
Indeed, the Washington Post oped argued that: “With Cheney’s dismissal from House leadership, the battle for the soul of the Republican Party — and our country — is not over. It is just beginning.”
But that’s not true. The fight is over. The crackpots, conspiracists and bigots have won, and there is no point pretending that this is a party that can be salvaged anytime soon. As Jeff Greenfield notes in Politico, there is no civil war in the Republican Party — there is only a “purge.”
The group seemed to acknowledge that when they promised that “We will not wait forever for the GOP to clean up its act.”
But, what are they waiting for now?
How many signs do they need? How many canaries have to die? How many red lines have to be crossed?
How many signs do they need? How many canaries have to die? How many red lines have to be crossed?
This is a party that remains in total thrall not just to Donald Trump, but to his lies as well. A recent poll found that fully 70 percent of Republican voters refuse to believe that Joe Biden won enough votes to be president. A Monmouth poll found 65 percent of GOP voters believe that Biden’s win was the result of voter fraud.
Over and over this party has told us what it has become. Let’s run the numbers:
- 126 GOP House members backed the Texas lawsuit to overturn the presidential election
- 138 GOP House members against certifying the electoral votes of Pennsylvania
- 199 GOP representatives voted to protect conspiracy theorist/bigot Marjorie Taylor Greene’s committee assignments
- 197 House Republicans voted against impeaching Trump for his role in the Jan. 6 insurrection
- Overall (in the House and Senate) the pro-Trump impeachment vote was 240-17
And then this last week:








