Rep. Kinzinger says he will not vote for Trump
GOP Rep. Richard Hanna (R-NY) voting for ClintonIllinois Rep. Adam Kinzinger said Wednesday he will not support Donald Trump in November, as he becomes the latest elected Republican official to break from the party.
Kinzinger told CNN he went to the Republican National Convention and had hoped to be able to endorse Trump by the end of it. However, the former Air Force pilot said after Trump’s comments on NATO and his spat with Khizr Khan, the father of a fallen soldier who spoke at the Democratic National Convention, he doesn’t see how he could endorse him.
“Donald Trump is beginning to cross a lot of red lines of the unforgivable in politics. I'm not going to support Hillary, but in America we have the right to skip somebody,” he said on CNN. “That's what it's looking like for me today. I don't see how I get to Donald Trump anymore.”
Kinzinger joins a growing list of Republicans who have said they will not support their party’s nominee for president. However, unlike many others in the group, Kinzinger is running for reelection. Earlier this week, New York Rep. Richard Hanna said he would back Clinton, but he is retiring from Congress.
Kinzinger did not say who he would vote for instead.
"There's a bunch of people on the ballot. There's a write-in option. I don't agree with Hillary Clinton on a lot of things, most things, probably almost all things, but Donald Trump, I don’t know what he stands for in foreign policy.”
Mark Kirk: First GOP senator to run anti-Trump TV adRetiring GOP Rep. Richard Hanna (R-NY) said he will vote for Hillary Clinton in November, making him the first Republican member of Congress to openly announce his support for the Democratic presidential nominee.
In an op-ed for Syracuse.com, Hanna writes that Trump is "deeply flawed in endless ways" and "unrepentant in all things" before declaring: "While I disagree with her on many issues, I will vote for Mrs. Clinton."
While a number of Congressional Republicans have openly repudiated Trump and said they will not vote for him -- including Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC), Sen. Jeff Flake (R-AZ), and Sen. Ben Sasse (R-NE) -- Hanna, a resolute #NeverTrump-er, is the first to go as far as crossing party lines in his opposition to the GOP presidential nominee.
"Months ago I publicly said I could never support Trump," Hanna wrote, calling him "profoundly offensive," "narcissistic," and "a world-class panderer."
"I do not expect perfection, but I do require more than the embodiment of at least a short list of the seven deadly sins," he added.
Hanna wrote that he has "long held the belief that the Republican Party is becoming increasingly less capable of nominating a person who is electable as president," suggesting that Hispanics, women, and the LGBT communities are groups that the GOP has grown increasingly out-of-step with.
Turning to Clinton, he explained that "Mrs. Clinton has issues that depending on where one stands can be viewed as great or small. But she stands and has stood for causes bigger than herself for a lifetime. That matters."
"While I disagree with her on many issues," he said, "I will vote for Mrs. Clinton."
Also on Tuesday, amid fallout from Trump's controversial feud with the family of a slain Muslim U.S. soldier, another Republican House member -- Rep. Charlie Dent (R-PA) -- announced he "no plans" to vote for Trump.
"That's where I am," Dent said on MSNBC's "Morning Joe." "I'm like millions of Americans right now that I have to be persuaded, and I just haven't been."
Dent, who supported Ohio Gov. John Kasich during the primaries, said that Trump's "incendiary comments" combined with his "lack of policy specifics and the contradictory nature of those policies" have caused him "a great deal of concern."
Dent added that Rep. Richard Hanna (R-NY) called him Sunday and said he was most likely going to support Hillary Clinton. Dent described Hanna as a "good friend" and a "rock solid guy."
CNN's Rachel Chason contributed to this report.
[youtube][/youtube]Sen. Mark Kirk, R-Illinois just became the first Republican incumbent in the Senate to run an ad attacking presumed GOP nominee Donald Trump.
The 30-second ad, titled "Even More," follows his decision earlier this month to rescind his endorsement of Republican presumptive nominee Donald Trump.
"...Mark Kirk bucked his party to say Donald Trump is not fit to be commander-in-chief," the ad proclaims.
Kirk's ad bucks his party in other ways, too, depicting a strong affinity for Democrats and their positions.
It points out his lonely support of the president's choice to replace the late Justice Antonin Scalia on the Supreme Court and his liberal position on abortion rights.
"Mark was the first Republican to support a vote on President Obama's Supreme Court nominee," the ad says. "He's a leader on protecting a woman's right to choose."
The ad also shows Kirk after his recovery from a debilitating stroke -- being helped up the Senate steps by Democrats: Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Joe Manchin, D-West Virginia.
Kirk, who was elected in the 2010 Republican wave, is widely thought to be the most vulnerable of the 2016 Republican incumbents in the Senate. And his Democratic opponent Tammy Duckworth is putting up strong fight for his Senate seat. Kirk didn't revoke his endorsement of Trump until after Duckworth's campaign accused him of being "complicit" in the billionaire's campaign of "hate and division."
Duckworth's campaign accused Kirk of portraying himself as "a liberal Democrat" in a liberal part of the state.
"Republican Senator Mark Kirk has lied for years about his military record, falsely claiming to have served in combat and claiming an award he never earned," the campaign said in a statement, continuing, "and now he's not being straight with Illinois voters by portraying himself as a liberal Democrat in Chicago while apparently hoping no one else across the state notices."
According to the Chicago Tribune, the Kirk campaign bought $230,000 in broadcast TV time in Chicago and $35,000 in cable time to run the ad.
John McCain's Republican granddaughter explains why she's voting for Hillary Clinton
The "fiercely loyal" granddaughter of Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) announced that she will be voting for Hillary Clinton despite identifying as a Republican. Although Caroline McCain confessed she is "nursing a grudge" against Donald Trump after he dismissed McCain, a former prisoner of war in Vietnam, for getting "captured," she also firmly laid out how the Republicanism of Trump is not one she is familiar with or supports:
If this is where the party is going — building walls to keep immigrants out, irrationally objecting to international trade, railing against marriage equality, then I'm gone. If this is where the nominee — who was for abortion before it was politically expedient, who is a racist and a misogynist, who wants to carpet bomb the Middle East and ban Muslims, wants to take the party — then I want nothing to do with it. [Medium]
Caroline McCain admitted she has her own issues with Clinton but "learned something important in 2000 and again in 2008: The picture the opposition and the media paints of a candidate is not the whole picture, and it is not the truthful picture."
"So I'm not a Democrat — at least not yet. But this year, I'm With Her," Caroline McCain concluded. Her grandfather, though, might not be too thrilled; John McCain backed Trump in May. Read Caroline's full justification of her decision over at Medium. Jeva Lange