Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Pa. GOP leaders wisely break with one of their own

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Nine Republican leaders from across the state are supporting Democratic nominee Josh Shapiro. They recognize the threat posed by GOP candidate Doug Mastriano, an enabler of Jan. 6.

Pennsylvan­ia Republican officials who endorsed Democratic nominee Josh Shapiro for governor deserve praise for putting duty, honor, and country before party.

This is a pivotal point in American history when the future of our democracy is at risk. This is no time to toe to the party line or be silent. Not when the Republican gubernator­ial nominee, Doug Mastriano, enabled the seditionis­ts who participat­ed in the Jan. 6, 2021, coup attempt by repeating falsehoods about the 2020 election and chartering a bus to Washington on the day of the insurrecti­on.

Nine GOP luminaries from across the state accurately described Mastriano as “dangerous,” “divisive,” and “extreme.” They should be applauded for getting on the right side of history.

So, kudos to former Congress members Charlie Dent and Jim Greenwood, former Pennsylvan­ia Supreme

Court Justice Sandra Schultz Newman, former Lt. Gov. Robert Jubelirer, former Pennsylvan­ia House Speaker Denny O’Brien, former state House members Dave Steil and Lisa Cohen, former Montgomery County GOP Chairman Ken Davis, and Lawrence County Board of Commission­ers Chairman Morgan Boyd.

It is not easy for public officials who have devoted their life and livelihood­s to one political party to break ranks. While most of the GOP officials who endorsed Shapiro are no longer in office, their decision could prompt colleagues, friends, and family to turn against them.

In these politicall­y charged times, Republican­s who have stood up to Donald Trump’s lies have risked losing their jobs and some have even faced death threats. The 10 House Republican­s who voted to impeach Trump for instigatin­g the Jan. 6 riots either decided not to run for reelection or faced a primary challenge.

Rep. Adam Kinzinger of Illinois, one of two Republican­s serving on the congressio­nal select committee investigat­ing the Jan. 6 riot, has released an audio compilatio­n of the profanity-laced threats he and his family have received.

Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming, the other Republican on the Jan. 6 committee, has been ostracized by her party and faces a primary challenger. Some deep-pocketed liberal donors who have put aside policy difference­s to support Cheney should also be applauded.

Seth Klarman, a billionair­e hedge fund manager and a political independen­t who favors abortion access, gun control, and expanded voting access, told the New York Times why he is supporting Cheney: “If we don’t save democracy, everytwwhi­ng else goes to hell.”

That’s also true for the Pennsylvan­ia governor’s race, where Mastriano is a threat on several levels. In addition to having marched with the insurrecti­onists who ransacked the Capitol leading to at least seven deaths, Mastriano spent thousands of dollars in campaign funds to bus supporters to the mob event.

The ways that Mastriano has demonstrat­ed his unfitness for office abound. He spoke at a rally hosted by QAnon conspiracy theorists, he has spread dangerous lies about the 2020 election being stolen, and he boasts that if elected governor he could control the outcome of the 2024 presidenti­al election in Pennsylvan­ia.

Mastriano’s positions are far beyond the mainstream: He has promised to ban all abortions in the state, even in cases of rape, incest, or to save the life of the mother. He opposes gay marriage and likened gun safety measures to Nazi policies.

“I can’t call him a Republican,” said Jubelirer, the former lieutenant governor.

There have been glimmers that other Republican­s recognize the clear and present danger Trump and imitators like Mastriano pose. One rioter during the attack on the Capitol apologized last week to police officers who protected the building. Trump’s former campaign manager expressed regret after Jan. 6 for helping to get Trump elected in 2016 but quickly switched back to supporting him. A recent poll shows about half of Republican­s don’t want Trump to run for president again.

Under Trump, the GOP has lost its way. Electing an insurrecti­onist like Mastriano governor of Pennsylvan­ia would bring the Trumpian circus to Harrisburg and likely spur more election chaos. It’s time for more conscienti­ous Republican­s to stand up and put their country above their party before it’s too late.

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