Los Angeles Times

Standing up against Trump

- Robert Fox Los Angeles Philip Springer Pacific Palisades Dan Caldwell Malibu The writer is a professor of political science at Pepperdine University.

Re “Don’t line up behind Trump,” editorial, June 1

Thanks to The Times for an important and well written editorial. How GOP leaders act now in deciding whether to support presumptiv­e presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump will be the issue they must address for themselves and the future of their party.

People will remember, and the Republican­s who endorse Trump for president will be defined by the company they keep. When you line up with Trump, you are also lining up with the birther movement, a thinly veiled method of race baiting that he championed. You are goose stepping in line with xenophobia, misogyny and un-American religious persecutio­n.

At least House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) quickly denounced Trump’s proposed halt to Muslim immigratio­n back in December. The objection I seem to hear most from Republican­s in the “never Trump” camp is that he isn’t a “true conservati­ve.”

Well, Speaker Ryan, voracious reader and deep thinker, our nation turns its weary eyes to you.

The Times’ effort to divide the Republican Party will have the opposite effect. It will help unite Republican­s in backing the only candidate who says what he means, not what is fashionabl­e to say.

This Republican politician­s who are “lining up behind Trump” should remember that in 2008 those Democrats, including Hillary Clinton and John Kerry, who supported going to war in Iraq either lost in the presidenti­al primary or chose not to run, and a similar thing could happen to Republican aspirants for the presidency in 2020.

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