Houston Chronicle Sunday

Republican­s, it’s time to move on from Trump

- By Alfredo Rodriguez III

I supported Donald Trump in 2016 before it was popular. I supported him again in 2020 for the accomplish­ments he achieved in his first term as president, despite his brazen, off-message rants and conflictin­g declaratio­ns.

Trump’s achievemen­ts and the direction in which he was leading our country outweighed his shortfalls. However, since the 2020 election, it has been time to move on from Trump.

Too many “Trump-underany-circumstan­ces” supporters, conspiracy theorists and disillusio­ned Trump acolytes refuse to do so. Although those who continue to think this way grow smaller in number, they still account for approximat­ely 25 to 35 percent of most Republican primary voters — the type of plurality that led to Trump earning the Republican nomination in 2016.

Trump served a purpose. He served it well, and beyond many expectatio­ns. Now he is entirely self-absorbed (more than before) and obsessed with the past, with no original thought or vision for the future of our country.

Trump grew the Republican Party. He brought more Hispanics, African Americans, Asians and other minority groups into the GOP. We are now losing those increases, largely because of his preoccupat­ion and inability to talk about anything other than “massive and widespread fraud,” “stolen elections,” “deception,” “fake news” and himself.

Trump cut taxes. He helped strengthen U.S. energy independen­ce. He held China and our enemies abroad accountabl­e. He cracked down on illegal crossings along our southern border. He unrelentin­gly supported our military and law enforcemen­t.

The economy was booming. Unemployme­nt was at its lowest in 50 years until the pandemic hit.

Trump served a purpose, accomplish­ed a great deal, but his time has passed. He has become a huge distractio­n in the political arena, his ability to contribute to America’s future has faded and now his overt disregard for the U.S. Constituti­on is embarrassi­ng.

Now more than ever it is time to move on, because if we do not Republican­s will continue to lose and underperfo­rm in elections, as we have for two consecutiv­e election cycles.

Should Trump be the 2024 nominee, we will lose the

White House again, we will not secure a majority in the U.S. Senate despite a favorable map, we will lose our slim majority in the House and likely lose governorsh­ips and state legislativ­e seats across the country.

Republican­s have a deep bench of young, vibrant and new talent. We have for several years, but since 2008 we have nominated political figures whose ideas are stale and outdated.

Trump once promised we were going to win so much that we would get tired of it. Republican­s have not been winning. We have been losing so much and I am tired of it, as are many others.

It is time for a generation­al change in the White House. It is time for a Republican nominee who truly wants to serve the American people rather than obsessivel­y litigate, talk and relive the past without any regard for tomorrow. It is time for Republican­s to put forward a candidate for president who has new ideas, real conservati­ve solutions and the talent to grow the GOP and appeal to independen­t voters.

It is time to move on from Trump. We can do better. We must do better. The 2024 election presents Republican­s this opportunit­y. Let’s not fail to take it.

Alfredo Rodriguez III is the founder and president of Dyce Communicat­ions, a national strategic communicat­ions, public affairs, media and Republican political consulting firm based in Charlotte. He worked for U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison and U.S. Rep. Henry Bonilla as a legislativ­e aide in Washington, D.C., the 2006 re-elect campaign for Gov. Rick Perry, and as director of community affairs for Perry.

 ?? Andrew Harnik/Associated Press ?? Former President Donald Trump announced he is running for president for the third time on Nov. 15 at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Fla. The author contends the GOP needs new leadership.
Andrew Harnik/Associated Press Former President Donald Trump announced he is running for president for the third time on Nov. 15 at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Fla. The author contends the GOP needs new leadership.

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