Evan McMullin: A conservative makes a last-ditch attempt to unseat Trump
A little-known GOP policy director and ex-CIA operative has declared his candidacy for president on an independent ticket.
A little-known GOP policy director and ex-CIA operative has declared his candidacy for president on an independent ticket.
Anti-Trump conservative and former chief policy director for the House Republican Conference Evan McMullin is reportedly launching an independent bid for president.
MSNBC鈥檚 Joe Scarborough broke the news on Twitter early Monday morning, writing that Mr. McMullin, who has never held elected office, had 鈥渢he backing of key $$ contributors in the Republican Party鈥, without elaborating.
McMullin, who became a senior advisor to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs in 2013, spent eleven years as an officer with the CIA, in addition to stints as a volunteer refugee resettlement officer with the United Nations, an investment banker with Goldman Sachs, and a deckhand for a commercial fishing vessel, according to his LinkedIn profile. On Monday morning, he resigned from his post as the chief policy director for the US House of Representatives Republican Conference, ABC reports.聽
The McMullin candidacy appears to be a last-ditch effort from some of the most outspoken conservative opponents of Donald Trump, who tumbled in the polls following his criticisms of the parents of a Muslim soldier killed in Iraq. It represents not only a further splintering of the Republican party, but an effort to regain control of the party's message and values.聽
鈥淚f [Trump] was doing better and this was announced, maybe you wouldn鈥檛 put as much stock in it,鈥 says Steve Jarding, a lecturer in public policy at the Harvard Kennedy School and longtime Democratic campaign consultant. McMullin's campaign might not come close to overtaking Trump's, but it could chip away support among conservatives by serving as a reminder of the GOP's core values, Mr. Jarding told the 海角大神 Science Monitor. 鈥淚 think Trump could win, but I don鈥檛 think he could win big. If your best scenario for winning is small, you can鈥檛 afford to lose anything.鈥
McMullin is backed by "Better for America," which earlier this year聽began an effort聽to get on the ballot in as many states as possible, with the hopes of drafting a candidate, The New York Times reports.聽
In contrast to the Republican nominee, McMullin has not shown much of a taste for social media, posting rarely on Twitter and Facebook. But he has devoted a considerable part of what little social media presence he has to criticizing Mr. Trump 鈥 accusing him being an 鈥渁uthoritarian,鈥 calling for him to release his tax returns, and rebuking his slighting of Muslims鈥 contributions to the country.
鈥淎s someone who served our nation in war, I find Donald Trump's religious attacks on Ghazala Khan, the mother of a fallen U.S. soldier, profoundly despicable,鈥 he wrote on Facebook on August 1. 鈥淗er son gave everything for our country and she, like thousands of other American mothers, has also made a painful lifelong sacrifice. No one who fails to understand this is fit to be our commander-in-chief.鈥
CNN聽notes聽that McMullin 鈥撀燼 2011 graduate of Brigham Young University, where he majored in international studies 鈥 could cause the Trump campaign problems in Utah, a reliably red state where Trump nonetheless has held little appeal.聽One poll聽last week showed Hillary Clinton in the lead there, though more recent ones put her slipping back behind him, as Libertarian Party candidate Gary Johnson聽continued to ascend.
Rick Wilson, a veteran GOP media strategist who has been a vociferous critic of Trump, will likely be involved in the campaign, according to Buzzfeed. In a New York Daily News op-ed published on Sunday, Wilson made no mention of an alternative conservative candidacy, but called for voters to deal Trump an "epic loss" that would "break us out of the direction Trump and Trumpism would take this nation."
鈥淭his is a legitimate guy, a legitimate conservative with legitimate credentials, and he鈥檚 got a legitimate group that鈥檚 backing him,鈥 Dr. Jarding says of McMullin.
鈥淚 think they鈥檙e saying, 鈥榳e realize that we鈥檙e in trouble and if we want to survive, we cannot let this guy who鈥檚 parading himself as the new face of the Republican party do well at all, because if he does, he could fundamentally damage our brand.鈥