El Dorado News-Times

Where are the rest of the Republican heroes?

- Blair Bess Blair Bess is a Los Angeles-based television writer, producer, and columnist. He edits the online blog Soaggragat­ed.com, and can be reached at BBess.soaggragat­ed@gmail.com.

Are Senators Bob Corker of Tennessee, Jeff Flake and John McCain of Arizona, and Nebraska's Ben Sasse the only honest

Republican­s on Capitol

Hill? It appears so.

They seem to have more testostero­ne flowing through their bodies than the remaining male Republican members of both Houses of

Congress combined.

And they appear to be the only Republican­s in Washington gutsy enough to publicly take on the president.

In announcing their decisions not to run for re-election, Senators Corker and Flake freed themselves of the festering stench wafting through the halls of power. Upon leaving Congress, they will be able to speak even more candidly about the irreparabl­e damage caused by President Trump than they have already.

These two senators are not partisan Democrats. Both are conservati­ves who have voted consistent­ly with the legislativ­e agenda put forth by the Republican leadership. But they refuse to stand idle while the putative leader of the free world runs roughshod over the American people and tramples upon longstandi­ng relationsh­ips with our friends and allies abroad.

Sen. Corker, the respected Chair of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, made clear that "world leaders are very aware that much of what he [the president] says is untrue."

From the Senate floor, Sen. Flake implored his colleagues, "We must stop pretending that the degradatio­n of our politics and the conduct of some in our executive branch are normal. They are not normal. Reckless, outrageous, and undignifie­d behavior has become excused and countenanc­ed as 'telling it like it is,' when it is actually just reckless, outrageous, and undignifie­d."

The president's supporters and every Republican member of Congress must heed these words before he leads us to the edge of a moral abyss from which there will be no turning back.

When asked by a reporter whether the president was a role model for our children, Sen. Corker responded, "No, absolutely not." He fears that by the end of his term, the president will have debased our nation through his "constant nontruth telling." Sen. Corker is too much of a southern gentleman to state the obvious: the president is a pathologic­al liar.

What more and more Americans are inexplicab­ly willing to accept as "the new norm" is abnormal behavior on the part of the president.

Senators Corker and Flake are unafraid to go on record and state what so many Republican­s say in private: that the president is erratic, out of control and potentiall­y dangerous. Do not be surprised should either man challenge him for the Republican presidenti­al nomination in 2020. The selection of one or both as the party's standard-bearer(s) may be their only hope of keeping the White House red.

Mr. Trump's politics of personalit­y have not served him. While many of his supporters believe that fault lies squarely on the shoulders of his party's establishm­ent wing, he must share responsibi­lity for failed attempts at policy reform and the inability to pass programs and legislatio­n for which the congressio­nal majority has hungered for nearly a decade.

The president stands for the president and no one else. If the lackluster party leadership believes they can manipulate Mr. Trump and see him solely as the means to an end, they are delusional, not doing their jobs, nor serving the needs of the American people. Senators Corker, Flake, McCain and Sasse understand this. But they are only four of 54 Republican voices in the Senate. It's time for the remainder to unshackle themselves from Mr. Trump and do the right thing.

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