They bought it. In truth, the GOP offered nothing else to buy except stale bread and promises that couldn't be kept. So the angry constituency voted for Trump and he got more votes than the rest of the clowns in the car. And he kept saying more outrageous and actually stupid things and those elected Republican officials all said, "Well, that's just Donald. It's a show. He'll change when he's actually running for president."
Well, Donald being Donald, he actually got worse, emboldened by his success and support from the Ku Klux Klan, white supremacists, anti-Semitic groups, crowds of angry white men and silent Republican officials.
His lies and offensive remarks were dismissed by Republican officials as they criticized him, but continued to support him as their party's nominee. His utter lack of experience and knowledge of what it takes to be president was also ignored. He'll put smart people around him, the elected officials said of the man who lives in bankruptcy court and lost a billion dollars in one year on a casino (which is rigged to make a profit), then bragged about not paying taxes because he's so "smart."
A billionaire not paying taxes! That's "smart" to Republicans because after all, we can finance the government on ... well, on the backs of all those middle-class Republican voters in the basement, not that we'll tell them that. If they ever figure it out, we're in trouble.
And so it went, until a few days ago when a TV show released a tape of Trump being Trump, talking in lewd terms about making unwanted sexual advances on women he finds attractive. The kind that a prosecutor would define as assault. Suddenly, dozens of elected Republican officials -- virtually all male and white, of course -- had had enough. How dare he talk that way about women!? Why, we have wives, daughters, mothers, sisters! Yes, and they all gave their husbands, fathers, sons and brothers a piece of their mind about that clown running for president as a Republican (which he really isn't).
Suddenly, the officials were called upon to do something they hadn't had to do for some time as Republicans -- make an individual moral judgment. (C'mon, McCain, say something!) If they had responded to the wishes of the Trump base of support, they would have just tsk-tsked him again. Almost as if he didn't say what they just heard him say. His supporters, as usual, excused him because they still blame Mexicans, blacks and Muslims for their problems. And the Trump women? I haven't figured that out.
Nonetheless, if sex is the tipping point for Republicans -- not surprising, actually -- then perhaps it will remind elected officials that they have a sworn duty to all the people they serve, to the greater good, and not just to to the bigots in the basement because they happened to vote for them.
In fact, If Republicans want some historic perspective on this matter, Edmund Burke, often referred to as the "Father of Conservatism," gave a famous speech in 1774 in the British House of Commons, in which he acknowledged the duty of an elected representative to his constituents: "It is his duty to sacrifice his repose, his pleasures, his satisfactions, to theirs; and above all, ever, and in all cases, to prefer their interests to his own. But his unbased opinion, his mature judgment, his enlightened conscience, he ought not to sacrifice to you, to any man, or to any set of men living. " Your representative owes you not his industry only, but his judgment; and he betrays, instead of serving you, if he sacrifices it to your opinion."
Paste that on the Big Orange Elephant in the middle of the room.
The betrayal Burke spoke of arises out of self-serving fear. "If I don't deny global warming, the thinking goes, they won't vote for me. If I support gay marriage, they won't vote for me. If I respect all religions, they won't vote for me. If I welcome immigrants, they won't vote for me. If I reject Trump, they won't vote for me. But I think global warming is a real threat. I think gays deserve the same rights as straights. I respect the First Amendment on religion. I believe immigrants built America. And I think Trump is a narcissistic, scary clown. What do I do?"
Donald the Groper just did them a favor.
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