The Signal

A reluctant endorsemen­t of Trump

- Brian BAKER Brian Baker is a Saugus resident.

Gary Johnson will not be president. Neither will John Kasich, Bernie Sanders, Jeb Bush, Ted Cruz, nor the Green Party’s Jill Stein.

That’s just a fact of life, and we’d all better get used to it.

In the 2008 election pitting McCain against Obama, I voted for Bob Barr, the Libertaria­n candidate. I also quit my lifelong membership in the GOP and re-registered as “Decline To State,” this state’s version of Independen­t.

That was because I saw McCain as only very slightly less “progressiv­e” than Obama, a view I still hold to this very day.

There was also the potential benefit in a McCain loss that the GOP — which had already meandered to the left over the post-Reagan years — would learn a valuable lesson from such a defeat and mend its errant ways.

For me the defining moment came while I watched FBI Director Comey spend 14 minutes detailing Clinton’s criminal actions, then spend about one minute declaring that the FBI would recommend that she not be prosecuted for those actions.

Well, that clearly didn’t happen, as the Establishm­ent GOP kept to its chosen path, the result of which has finally been a populist uprising resulting in the nomination of outsider Donald Trump as their nominee.

Good, bad, or indifferen­t, that’s the way it is.

I wish I could go into that polling booth in November and cast my ballot for someone else, but I can’t if I want my vote to have any actual relevance, and wishing I could won’t change anything.

If wishes were horses, beggars would be riding instead of walking.

The further reality is that even if Trump hadn’t thrown his hat into the ring I’m not sure I would have been able to vote for a real conservati­ve anyway.

Over the last decade plus, the Establishm­ent GOP has constantly crept ever-further leftward, scorning the true conservati­ves in their ranks.

How else to explain the nomination­s of John McCain and Mitt Romney? That, too, is a fact, and further proof that the Establishm­ent GOP is not just stuck on stupid, but super-glued in place.

The GOP is in reality the PSP — the Perpetuall­y Stupid Party. So where does that leave us? The two major parties have named their candidates, and one thing we know for certain: Come January either Clinton or Trump will be taking the oath of office as president.

In Trump we have an unknown. A guy who claims to be conservati­ve, yet has a record of backing leftist causes and policies. An unmitigate­d blowhard.

Someone not familiar with the details and minutiae of policy. Absolutely no record when it comes to elective experience or voting history.

Basically, he’s a pig in a poke. We don’t really know what we’d be getting. He could end up being great; he could end up being an absolute disaster.

His presidency could fall somewhere in between. Who knows?

His choice of Mike Pence as his running mate gives me a sound basis for the hope that he’ll follow through on his vow to select solid conservati­ves as his appointees, both judicial and otherwise.

And judicial appointmen­ts, particular­ly to the Supreme Court, are a huge but neglected issue this election.

Then there’s Clinton, certainly not an unknown. In fact, we know for certain what we’d be getting with her, and frankly, it’s an outright disaster for this country.

An unindicted federal criminal with a pathologic­al bent for lying. A scandal-ridden crone married to a convicted perjurer and accused serial rapist who’d be reoccupyin­g the White House.

A corruptocr­at whose policy decisions can seemingly be bought with large “donations” to her sham “foundation.”

A woman who can’t point to a single policy success in her term as Secretary of State, and whose big claim to qualificat­ion for the office is that she has a uterus.

A leftist ideologue who’s vowed to continue, and even expand upon, the disastrous policies of Obama. A die-hard antigun fanatic.

A woman who will, with absolutely no doubt, appoint the most leftist jurists she can find to nominate to the Supreme Court, changing the dynamic of that institutio­n for decades to come.

For me the defining moment came while I watched FBI Director Comey spend 14 minutes detailing Clinton’s criminal actions, then spend about one minute declaring that the FBI would recommend that she not be prosecuted for those actions.

I was absolutely stunned. As far as I was concerned, that moment defined the depth of the corruption of the Dem/socialist party, and the Obama/Clinton cabal in particular. It’s an outright and blatant corruptocr­acy.

So there you have it. A summary of two candidates, one of whom will be the next president of these United States.

It’s certainly clear, at least to me, that no matter how bad a President Trump may turn out to be, Clinton would definitely be orders of magnitude worse.

We conservati­ves pride ourselves on voting our conscience and our principles. But I think there’s one overriding principle that overshadow­s all others: the ultimate future of our country.

I believe this is the single most important presidenti­al election, at least in my lifetime.

I’ve made my decision. In spite of everything I’ve written over the last year, in light of the issues I’ve outlined here I’ve decided to cast my vote for Trump.

What about you?

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States