Sen. Lisa Murkowski, aghast at Donald Trump’s candidacy and the direction of her party, won’t rule out bolting from the GOP.

The veteran Alaska Republican, one of seven Republicans who voted to convict Trump in his second impeachment trial amid the aftermath of January 6, 2021, is done with the former president and said she “absolutely” would not vote for him.

“I wish that as Republicans, we had … a nominee that I could get behind,” Murkowski told CNN. “I certainly can’t get behind Donald Trump.”

The party’s shift toward Trump has caused Murkowski to consider her future within the GOP. In the interview, she would not say if she would remain a Republican.

Asked if she would become an independent, Murkowski said: “Oh, I think I’m very independent minded.” And she added: “I just regret that our party is seemingly becoming a party of Donald Trump.”

  • Optional
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    1232 months ago

    Murkowski who voted for almost every bullshit corrupt nominee and tax break the trump administration coughed up? That Murkowski?

    Yes she had the occasional “reservation”. Like Collins she just did the evil 72% of the time anyway.

    • @JustZ
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      122 months ago

      72% sounds exceptional to me. Most of the legislation that the House and Senate deal with is uncontroversial and unless you read the daily Congressional Record would never hear about because it concerns only a handful of people or it’s something we all agree on. Shit like nominations for the deputy undersecretary to the diplomat plenopotentiary to Mauritania or whatever. I’m sure a lot more of it is being unnecessarily politicized in order to sabotage the country but still. Even Bernie and Ted Cruz I would expect to be more than 72%. Got me curious.

  • @Fapper_McFapper
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    872 months ago

    “If we nominate Trump, we will get destroyed … and we will deserve it”

    -Senator Lindsey Graham

    • @gAlienLifeform
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      They’ve all deserved it for a long time and for a lot of things. I’m pretty sure nobody in an elected position in DC today was there in 1964 when Goldwater’s clique inside the GOP turned it anti-civil rights and pro-Southern Strategy, but every elected Republican in DC today knew that had happened and signed up anyway

      The Republican party is the disease that needs curing*, everything they’ve done are just worsening symptoms of that disease

      *For the record, I think violence would be an ineffective and self-defeating course of treatment

      • @JustZ
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        This mf spittin.

        I wasn’t even old enough to vote but was stumping for a candidate many years ago, a Democrat, and an older voter rebuffed me while walking into the polling place, fine, but then he said “you know that’s the party of socialists and communists right?” And I’m like “yeah the other party is that of the KKK.”

        Not all Republicans are Klan but all Klan are Republicans. And I keep waiting for the day the GOP will kick these fools to the curb but every year they go further to the right. Fine, maybe you’re too young to remember Goldwater. Remember Willie Horton? Remember Sarah Palin?

        They keep on showing everyone there is no floor. That’s why David Frum warns that before Republicans reject conservatism, they will reject democracy.

        And here we are.

    • @samus12345
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      2 months ago

      Important thing to note here is that he just meant they would be “destroyed” in the election - as long as Trump means they stay in power, he has no problem with him.

  • downpunxx
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    242 months ago

    “I’m shocked to find gambling going on in this establishment. Your winnings, sir! Thank you, thank you very much”

  • @Rapidcreek
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    162 months ago

    She’d do it too. And she would still be re-elected.

      • @Rapidcreek
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        132 months ago

        One time Murkowski was not on the ballot and needed to be written in, and spelled correctly. She still won.

  • @[email protected]
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    152 months ago

    So guys, there’s this sinking ship, see, and she’s on it and afraid she’ll drown - so when faced with irrelevance she finally finds an excuse to get onto another ship.

    The important thing to remember is that she’s still the same piece of shit she’s always been… so don’t let her on our ship. Just let her fall into irrelevance.

  • @Snapz
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    62 months ago

    hey y’all, no joke… I’m totally gonna maybe probably be pretty dang upset this time you guys… Seriously, don’t be surprised if I might possible potentially consider not fully supporting the worst shit again - okay, so I did support it again, but you got to admit, I got pretty close to not doping that for a second maybe (I didn’t, but you can totally imagine what it would be like if I did right?)

  • RedFox
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    2 months ago

    We need to stop being afraid of electing third or independent party candidates because the other side might win.

    We will keep losing in the end no matter what if we don’t fight for a new political system. Most people agree this isn’t working.

    Can we stop urging people to vote for a D/R and focus on independent?

    • @[email protected]
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      302 months ago

      I’ve voted third party most of my life. I will not while Trump and his flunkies run. And I will not urge anyone else to vote third party as I often had prior to 2016.

      There has to be an American democracy in order for any voting to matter. Once fascism and autocracy is defeated vote for whomever you fucking want, but not today.

      • RedFox
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        -92 months ago

        I feel what you’re saying.

        This is weird, but I miss Bush and the Az senator who reminded me of a wax museum statue. He was a war vet, but also ancient. At least their faults in my mind were lesser then the blatant issues now. I never thought the US was seriously at risk, just another shitty couple years. I used to think that about all of them.

        Now I’m worried…

        • @[email protected]
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          82 months ago

          You’re thinking of John McCain. I disagreed with most of his principles, but respect the fact that he generally stuck to them. Our perspectives and politics were very different, but he seemed to have good character

          • RedFox
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            I wasn’t worried about him over throwing the constitution, that’s for sure. Maybe having health issues…

            Edit, not sure why someone feels the need to down vote your answer, it wasn’t an inflammatory comment 🤷

          • @[email protected]
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            42 months ago

            I might’ve voted for him in 2000, but by 2008 he was a different man and worse for it. Still stuck up for Obama when a heckler called him a Muslim. I respect McCain, but also he sold his fucking soul for his run in 2008. I respected him so much more when he stood up to his party when he thought they were wrong.

            • @[email protected]
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              22 months ago

              His defense of Obama was still couched in bigotry. To paraphrase (I think), he said, “Mr. Obama is not a Muslim, he is a decent person.” Yes, he meant well, but he still flubbed it.

          • RedFox
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            -32 months ago

            Where did you get strong opinions?

            Your football comment make me think you dont know most of the world loves ⚽

            You probably mean 🏈?

            Are ⚽🏈 people dumb?

    • @Sterile_Technique
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      192 months ago

      An important first step to supporting 3rd parties would be a full switch to ranked choice.

      So long as the spoiler effect is at play, you literally only have two choices… voting 3rd or not voting at all are both still choosing one of the big two, you’re just sacrificing what voice you have and letting other voters choose for you.

      Here and now, suck it up and choose the lesser evil. We can work on restructuring our political system later - it needs it, but we’ve got bigger fish to fry.

      • @candybrie
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        12 months ago

        I’m not sure how we fry this fish without fixing our voting system. There’s no real incentive for anyone to do better in the current system.

        • @Sterile_Technique
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          22 months ago

          I’m not sure how we fry this fish

          -this- fish is christofascism, and when christofascists are running, you fry it by voting for whoever has the best chance of beating them. Is it an optimal solution? Fuck no, but it’s the only thing we can do.

          Fixing the system is a much longer term goal that may never actually happen if we stay stuck in this death spiral with christofascism, but failing to push against the christofascism isn’t going to help the 3rd parties, it’ll just accelerate the christofascism.

          And as shitty as it is, maintaining the status quo is orders of magnitude more preferable than christofascism.

          • @candybrie
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            -12 months ago

            Just electing someone who isn’t a christofacist isn’t a solution. You need the choice to stop being between X and christfacism every election. X is going to lose an election at some point. People are going to stop believing that this is the most important election and of our lives, and we need to overlook anything wrong with X.

            • @Sterile_Technique
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              42 months ago

              Agreed, but it’s the closest thing to a solution we have. Wasting your vote on a 3rd just invites the christofascists to take power - and if we let that happen, there is ZERO chance for a 3rd to take power.

              Right now we have two realistic outcomes: red victory or blue victory. You can nudge the odds toward one of those two. That’s it. Your action or inaction only influences those two outcomes. Choose wisely.

              • @candybrie
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                12 months ago

                I didn’t say waste your vote on 3rd parties. I said to get out of this christofacist death spiral, we probably need to fix our voting system. Obviously, that isn’t going to happen in one election cycle. But we need to be pushing that reform. Because the next election cycle isn’t going to magically be any better than this one without it.

                • @Sterile_Technique
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                  12 months ago

                  Gotcha, then yeah I misunderstood. The earlier poster I was responding to was advocating for wasting votes on 3rds, so I assumed you were posting under that same context.

                  Yes our system is shit, and yes it will still probably be shit next cycle too.

      • RedFox
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        -82 months ago

        I don’t disagree, but in my lifetime, we’ve been in much better shape in the past and still been unwilling to break away from the status quo.

        Now that the situation is much more dire, it’s even more frustrating that we lacked the will or desires that could potentially have lessened the chances of this outcome.

        I try convincing the less diehard devotees to switch and they’re still hung up on the aspects of the other party they disagree with.

        • @TheDoozer
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          52 months ago

          You know when you’re sick and pretty much bed-ridden, and you think “if only I wasn’t sick, I would be working out today and doing such-and-such,” but then as soon as you feel okay again you don’t actually do it or think about it until you physically can’t again?

          I feel like it’s like that. That doesn’t mean you should work out while you’re sick. It just means that we need to remember when we’re well.

          (To be clear, what I’m saying is I get it and you’re right, but regardless we can’t reasonably do it right now. But once we put fascism down, or if it wanes enough to make a reasonable go of it, we absolutely should remember and fix the voting system).

          • RedFox
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            32 months ago

            Pretty good analogy. You’re not wrong, I’m still mad about it. We’ll be our undoing. Feels like Rome…

        • HopeOfTheGunblade
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          42 months ago

          The Republicans explicitly want me dead. What is my incentive to not vote against them as hard as I can?

            • HopeOfTheGunblade
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              32 months ago

              https://www.erininthemorning.com/p/southern-states-pushing-forward-with

              https://www.erininthemorning.com/p/retaliation-texas-ag-paxton-demands

              https://www.erininthemorning.com/p/republicans-issue-new-government

              https://www.erininthemorning.com/p/west-virginia-bill-would-mandate

              https://newrepublic.com/article/178576/republicans-reveal-end-game-fight-trans-kids

              And, in advance of your reply, please don’t bother telling me the yellow liquid that smells like piss running down my leg is rain. Conversion therapy kills. Getting proper treatment saved my life, and they explicitly want to take that away from me. Address this rather than trying to explain it away, or just don’t waste both of our time. I’m sure you have more productive things to do than deny what I can plainly see.

              • RedFox
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                -12 months ago

                WTF. I don’t know where to start.

                I don’t understand what’s happening in the plains states. It’s like a tornado sucked out all their humanity. I hadnt seen that yet.

                You lost me with piss… 🤷

                I actually have a lot of empathy for people who are shit on. I don’t hate you or think you should have to feel that way.

                • @[email protected]
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                  42 months ago

                  The piss comment is a reference to an American idiom. I guess they missed that one in your training.

                • HopeOfTheGunblade
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                  12 months ago

                  A reference to the phrase, “don’t piss on my leg and tell me it’s raining,” ie, I can see what is happening in front of me. And they’d implement this shit on a federal level if they could; there were 40 such provisions they tried to get into the recent budget bills. The Twitter caucus has decided that I am an abomination, that my existence as myself makes me a pedophile, and that pedophiles deserve to be killed. The rest of the party is generally apathetic towards this, and will let them run the show on such matters if they are in an unassailable position. I thought John McCain was someone who I could have voted for in 2008, but he was the last Republican who was even remotely there; even the Republicans who managed the absolute minimum bar of recognizing a coup attempt when it tried to hang them, went along with the program the vast, vast majority of the time, right up until the doors were being hammered on by an angry mob.

        • @Sterile_Technique
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          22 months ago

          That is frustrating, but also peanuts compared to what’s on the table today. We are facing a very real risk of losing our democracy to christofascism, and if we let that happen, the 3rd parties and everyone else who isn’t a christofascist is fucked.

          Vote according to the reality of our situation; don’t let an unachievable ideal enable the greater evil.

          • RedFox
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            -12 months ago

            This is just my opinion, but I do not believe those people most of us associate with chrisofascism are Christian at all.

            Again, just my opinion, none of these politicians or people screaming about their faith no anything about Christianity. Or are not at all followers of it.

            • @Sterile_Technique
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              02 months ago

              As is the case with almost every ‘christian’. It’s never been about the religion - that’s just a tool to sell hateful policies.

              • RedFox
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                02 months ago

                I usually call it plain old bigotry, but I think some just legitimately don’t know it.

                I have met people who had good hearts, but stupid beliefs. I think some are sheltered and do t have perspective.

                Then there’s cake lady. AKA, bigot. Exactly what you said.

    • @CoggyMcFee
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      That’s sort of like saying I need to stop being afraid of setting the world record in the 50m dash. It’s not fear that prevents me from doing it, it’s the way my body is constructed that’s the problem. You’re treating something systemic as though it’s a collective personal failing of each voter.

      The good thing is that, unlike with my body and the 50m dash, it is possible to modify our election system to make it possible (and even inevitable) that we have successful third party candidates. This is no easy feat, and I imagine the way to do it is probably by making changes at the state and local level and expanding it from there. But there is no quick way to do it. In any case, simply trying to vote third party in spite of our existing system (especially at the national level) is going to go the same way it has always gone. Even if you make a blip or even a big splash, you’re swimming upstream the whole time, pushing against the system correcting itself back to stability. We saw it with Perot in the 90s when his Reform Party died out really fast.

    • @gAlienLifeform
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      62 months ago

      Given enough time, our first past the post system will always lead to two large coalition parties shaking out of the variety of movements/ideologies we’ve got going on at any point. It just makes too much strategic sense for groups B and C who don’t want group A getting power but don’t agree on anything else to team up to try to get the plurality in a single round of voting that counts as a win under our system.

      What I think we need is a) some political upheaval resulting from one of the two parties collapsing, b) a focused and determined effort during that time of upheaval to change our vote counting systems to something less dumb (e.g. insrant run off ranked choice voting is probably the simplest but still effective model).

  • @mydude
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    -592 months ago

    I’m not up to date on all the impeach things around Trump. They have been at it for months/years? Has he been convicted for anything (up til now?)

      • GladiusB
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        42 months ago

        What’s the difference between sealioning and trolling. Honest question. Or is it just new lingo?

      • @mydude
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        -22 months ago

        deleted by creator

      • @mydude
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        -132 months ago

        I had to google it… “You disingenuously frame your conversation as a sincere request to be enlightened”. I litterally said that I was uninformed/not paying too much attention. I have payed attention in 2016- about 2020. So was wondering if they actualy got him for something now, or not. Sorry for asking… Jeez. Trump sure triggers alot of people…

      • @DRStamm
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        102 months ago

        Some of those “charged in a few states” cases are actually federal indictments. Federal indictments have to be charged in a specific federal court system district (6th Amendment).

        The classified documents case in Florida? Federal. The January 6th/election obstruction case? That’s so federal it was brought in the DC circuit.

    • @mydude
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      -82 months ago

      Wow, people sure don’t like the simple questions. Lol

    • @mydude
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      -532 months ago

      Are they “throwing shit at the wall, and seing what sticks”? Sure looks that way…

      • @gAlienLifeform
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        432 months ago

        Nonchalantly replying to their own comments is the behavior of the goodest of faith commenters /s

        • @mydude
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          Why? I’m trying to add context/add a comment. Who should I properly reply this comment to then? I’m genuinly wondering…

      • @[email protected]
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        142 months ago

        I mean no one has been working on impeaching trump since 2021. So I’m not sure what you’re even referring to here.

        • @mydude
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          -102 months ago

          Russia, “walls are closing in” since 2016?

          • @[email protected]
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            Trump and his various organizations have been engaging in brazen criminal activity since at least 2016, is that what you mean?

            He’s a slippery bastard so he has gotten away with it until now, yes.

            • @mydude
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              -72 months ago

              Yes, I keep getting told this, years ago. So i stopped paying attention to Trump-stuff, that’s why i’m asking…

              • @[email protected]
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                OK I was just confused by you bringing up impeachment which hasn’t been a thing since he was last in office 3 years ago.

                If you are genuinely curious, several criminal indictments have been put forth against him by several states and federal prosecutors but there are no verdicts as of yet. My assessment is that he is guilty but because of his wealth and power there is a high chance of acquittal or a hung jury or something along those lines. It’s also very possible that he will be elected president before the cases conclude which may present a constitutional crisis.

                Courts have also found that he probably sexually assaulted Jean Carroll and that his business activities were fraudulent but these were civil and not criminal cases.

                Also, a number of his underlings have been convicted of various crimes while doing his bidding, but as of yet he has not been convicted of anything. So there’s a lot of underhanded stuff going on but no direct convictions of Trump yet. Kind of like the shady mob boss who everyone knows is behind it all but it’s hard to prove. You can look up his former lawyer and fixer Michael Cohen’s under-oath testimony about how he uses the same tactics as other organized crime leaders to leave just enough doubt to avoid criminal charges.

                • @mydude
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                  -72 months ago

                  Thank you for your thoughtful and good answer. This is exactly what I was joping for. A straightforward unbiased answer.

                  If I may, I think of Trump like a bumbling fool, snake-oil salesman, con-artist and kind of a dumb-ass. So how can he have done so many things and not have any mess-ups, so big, they create rock solid evidence against him? You only need one serious crime with good evidence for conviction, right? They are talking about 80-90 inditemints (or counts?) Why not just focus on the thing they have evidence for? So they don’t dilute the case, make it straight forward, with evidence and make it stick?

                  I will repeat my unpopular opinion, but it seems like they are thowing shit against the wall and seeing what sticks…