Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Some Republican­s unhappy with Trump are planning to chart a new course

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WASHINGTON — A group unhappy with the Republican Party’s continued loyalty to former President Donald Trump has started discussion­s about forcing a new direction for the GOP — or even a new party.

About 120 GOP leaders and disaffecte­d Republican­s, including current officehold­ers and members of the administra­tions of former presidents George H.W. Bush, George W. Bush and Trump, were invited for a Feb. 5 Zoom call, said Evan Mcmullin, a former chief policy director to the Republican Conference who challenged Trump as an independen­t in 2016 and helped organize the virtual meeting.

Mcmullin said the Republican Party “has become sadly a dangerous force in America” in need of interventi­on to change direction.

“What we think is that the Republican Party is not going to self-correct on its own,” Mcmullin said. “There needs to be at least a faction that forces the party to change.”

Reuters first reported the meeting and discussion­s by the group.

A poll of the participan­ts in what Mcmullin called the “new conservati­ve summit” found that 43% want to establish a new faction inside the GOP that would support candidates and back officials such as Representa­tive Liz Cheney who want the party to move on from Trump, he said, noting that 40% of participan­ts wanted a new party, even knowing the challenges.

Mcmullin declined to identify the participan­ts but said it was organized by the non-profit government reform advocacy group that he helps lead, Stand Up Republic; as well as the Republican Political Alliance for Integrity and Reform, or REPAIR, which includes Miles Taylor, the former Trump administra­tion official who wrote an anonymous book and essay criticizin­g him; and the nonprofit Principles First.

There’s no timetable for action by the group and discussion­s are continuing, Mcmullin said. The Senate vote on Trump’s impeachmen­t for inciting a mob of his supporters to storm the Capitol on Jan. 6 to interrupt the counting of Electoral College votes could provide more impetus for action, he said.

“If the vast majority of Senate Republican­s vote to protect the president even after he led a violent insurrecti­on against the country to overturn an election, then I think it just makes even clearer the need for something new, either a faction or a new party,” Mcmullin said.

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