Since taking the oath of office in January, Donald Trump
has provided evidence, almost daily, that he is ill-suited to be
president of the United States.
For months, much of the country has
watched in despair as he and his administration have meat-axed the
Affordable Care Act; crushed forward-looking Obama-era regulations in
education, the environment and consumer protection; and backtracked on
civil rights. He has made a mess of things with our allies, emboldened
our adversaries and embarrassed the nation on the world stage. We have
groaned through his insults and lies and witnessed his embrace of people
and causes that travel on the dark side.
He shows no signs of relenting.
Trump
bullies, brutalizes and slimes with impunity because members of his
base cheer his every move or concoct reasons to keep their mouths shut
whenever he crosses a red line. And his enablers are not just holed up
in America's heartland and red states; they are here in Washington
lining the halls of Congress under the banner of the Republican Party.
His rabid base, however, is no reason to stand down.
There is just cause to stand up to him. And the way to
give voice to disgust with Trump is through the vote. Yes, that weapon
which makes a noise that no politician, regardless of polls and scads of
PAC money, can ignore.
Preparation begins now.
Tend to the basics: Get registered, get others registered, and get
educated on how to vote because voter suppression is running amok,
especially in the South. Get information about the elections and the
candidates. And don't pass up any contest.
State
legislature and gubernatorial races are just as important as elected
jobs in Washington. And don't buy the argument that your vote doesn't
count if you happen to live in a voting area where your party is
outnumbered.
Vote anyway, even if you cast a ballot for none of the above. That vote speaks volumes to the one who loses it.
Keep
that thought in mind when entering the voting booth in state
legislature contests and House and Senate races. Those GOP officeholders
are key to Trump's base. Through their votes and, at times, their
inaction, they are keeping him in business and his agenda alive.
Upcoming elections should be a referendum on Trump.
Face it: Stripped and unadorned, House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.) is, politically, a Donald Trump.
House
Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) and House Intelligence
Committee Chairman Devin Nunes (R-Calif.)? Think Donald Trump.
Look
no further than the likes of Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.), Rep. Will
Hurd (R-Tex.) and Rep. Barbara Comstock (R-Va.) to find a political
likeness of Donald Trump on the ballot.

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