Courageous Republicans who are brave enough to abandon evil Donald Trump like Maryland Allan Kittleman
Maryland: Allan Kittleman: Why I’m leaving the GOP (aka "Growing Old Party") | Reader Commentary published in The Baltimore Sun
My family spent generations helping build the Republican Party.
Most Americans want something better ❗than the politics of fear, outrage and blind loyalty.
For me, leaving the Republican Party is painful. It means stepping away from a lifelong identity and a family legacy I deeply respect. But staying meant accepting what the party has become — and I refuse to do that.
From— Allan H. Kittleman, West Friendship, Maryland
Kittleman is a former Republican Senate minority leader in the Maryland General Assembly and was the Howard County executive.
After 50 years as a registered Republican, I made the difficult decision to leave the GOP party and become an unaffiliated voter.
My family spent generations helping build the Republican Party.
My grandfather chaired his county GOP, in lowa. My father, Bob Kittleman, led the Howard County (Maryland) Republican Party and served more than two decades in the Maryland General Assembly. I followed the same path, chairing the county party, serving in the Maryland Senate — including three years as minority leader — and later as Howard County executive.
For several years, I hoped this was temporary. I stayed through 2016, through 2020, through January 6, believing the party might eventually reclaim its core values.
For several years, I hoped this was temporary. I stayed through 2016, through 2020, through January 6, believing the party might eventually reclaim its core values.
But, tragically, Trump’s 2024, election and his illegal actions during the past year have made the truth unavoidable: The Republican Party has fully become the Trump maga Party. Those who refuse to fall in line are pushed out or ignored.
My own beliefs have not changed. I remain fiscally conservative and socially moderate — a combination that once had room in the GOP. It no longer does. And to be clear: I am not joining the Democratic Party. I cannot support the direction of either party, both of which have drifted toward their extremes and away from the broad middle where most Americans live.
My decision isn’t a rejection of the people in my life who remain Republicans. This is not a conversion to the other side.
My own beliefs have not changed. I remain fiscally conservative and socially moderate — a combination that once had room in the GOP. It no longer does. And to be clear: I am not joining the Democratic Party. I cannot support the direction of either party, both of which have drifted toward their extremes and away from the broad middle where most Americans live.
My decision isn’t a rejection of the people in my life who remain Republicans. This is not a conversion to the other side.
Rather, this is simply me saying I can no longer put my name next to a culture that treats disagreement as warfare and political opponents as enemies.
Yet, I try to remain optimistic about our future.
Yet, I try to remain optimistic about our future.
But the GOP party we devoted our lives to no longer exists.😟😥
The GOP once stood for limited government, fiscal discipline and individual liberty. Today, it is defined by loyalty to one man: Donald Trump. Principles that once guided Republican leaders — even in moments of national crisis — have been replaced by a demand for personal allegiance. The independence Republicans showed during Watergate has all but vanished. Too many elected officials now treat dissent as betrayal.
The GOP once stood for limited government, fiscal discipline and individual liberty. Today, it is defined by loyalty to one man: Donald Trump. Principles that once guided Republican leaders — even in moments of national crisis — have been replaced by a demand for personal allegiance. The independence Republicans showed during Watergate has all but vanished. Too many elected officials now treat dissent as betrayal.
Most Americans want something better ❗than the politics of fear, outrage and blind loyalty.
What we want are leaders who tell the truth, who listen, who solve problems and who put country above personal ambition. We want public service grounded in integrity, not intimidation. I will continue to advocate for these principles and for leaders who fit this profile.
For me, leaving the Republican Party is painful. It means stepping away from a lifelong identity and a family legacy I deeply respect. But staying meant accepting what the party has become — and I refuse to do that.
From— Allan H. Kittleman, West Friendship, Maryland
Kittleman is a former Republican Senate minority leader in the Maryland General Assembly and was the Howard County executive.
Labels: GOP, Howard County, Maryland, The Baltimore Sun, West Friendship


0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home