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In the context of the second political trial that the US Congress is conducting against former President Donald Trump, strong divisions are emerging within the Republican Party. In this context, More than 100 former Republican officials are analyzing the possibility of forming a new center-right political space.
Charlie Dent, a former Pennsylvania state congressman, recognized the necklace CNN that he and about 120 Republicans held a video conference on Zoom last Friday to review the ability to form a new party or faction within the Republican Party.
The official explained that with this initiative they seek to promote “fundamental principles such as truth and fairness, and democracy and the rule of law.” Ideas that according to those involved have been shattered by Trump in the last four years.
Four leaders involved in the discussions informed the bureau Reuters that dissidents include former officials in the governments of Ronald Reagan, George HW Bush, George W. Bush and Donald Trump. There are also former ambassadors and strategists.
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Among them stand out John Mitnick, General Counsel of the Department of Homeland Security under Trump; former Republican Congressman Charlie Dent Elizabeth Neumann, Deputy Chief of Staff for the Department of Homeland Security under Trump; Y Miles Taylor, another former Trump national security official.
Evan McMullin, who served as policy director for the Republican Conference of the House of Representatives and was independent in the 2016 presidential election, said Reuters with whom the Zoom conversation has been arranged Former officials are concerned about Trump’s hold on Republicans and the party’s nationalist turn.
While most Republicans continue to support the former president, many members of the party, who had already followed certain actions and behaviors of the former president with suspicion, reaffirmed their stance against the tycoon following his allegations of electoral fraud and after the Attack on 6 January on the Capitol, triggering a second impeachment trial.
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On January 13, a week after the violent events that killed five, The House of Representatives accused the former president of instigating an uprising by urging thousands of supporters to march on Capitol Hill the day Congress gathered to confirm Democrat Joe Biden’s electoral victory.
Republicans seeking to reverse the party were appalled that more than half of the Republicans in Congress – eight senators and 139 representatives – voted to block Biden’s certification just hours after the Capitol siege. Most Republican senators have also announced that they will not support Trump’s conviction in this week’s impeachment trial. “That’s what I fear most now, that Trump will feel justified. You will feel as if you have been acquitted “Dent said, adding that he believes the former president will try to hold those who voted against him accountable “in his perverse way.”
“Large sections of the Republican Party are radicalizing and threatening American democracy … The party must once again adhere to truth, reason, and fundamental ideals, or there must be clearly something new,” McMullin said. Reuters. He added, “This is a new direction for the party, and we are trying to unite people who are committed to our fundamental values, and with those who want to, regardless of who they have supported in the past, and the fact that our growing numbers is the most exciting thing about it. “
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For his part, Dent emphasized Republican congressmen as Liz Cheney (Wyoming), Adam Kinzinger (Illinois), Mitt Romney (Utah), and Fred Upton (Michigan), who “defended the truth and the principles and wanted this party to be different.” “We don’t want to follow that man who brought nothing but defeat, misery and rebellion … We are moving forward, not backward.”
Anthony Scaramucci, who had a brief stint in the Trump administration as White House communications director, also confirmed to the CNN his intention to join this group of Republicans to form a “center-right party”.
“I think what has happened in the last three or four days has reinforced a very large group of people who believe that if the Republicans in the Senate don’t condemn Trump, the party will split in two,” said Scaramucci, who he also estimated. that if Trump is acquitted, 20% of the Republican Party will separate to create a new space.
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“It will be a center-right party that will work with the Democrats and liquidate the nonsense of the far right,” he said.
When asked about these discussions within the Republican Party, Jason Miller, a Trump spokesman said, “These losers left the Republican Party when they voted for Joe Biden.”
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