I’ve long beat the drum for one of the GOP’s central illnesses being their tendency towards toxic team politics, or known to the political world as Democrats fall in love, Republicans fall in line: party line voting.
And it seems a few of them are inching slowly, with eyes squinted, towards this diagnosis. Well, one, at least. Sort of.
Georgia Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan, a Republican, declared himself unable to vote for either Walker or Warnock.
“When there’s division in the locker room, there’s finger-pointing. It’s usually kind of the hallmark sign of a losing season,” said Duncan, who has been highly critical of Walker. He drew derision from other Republicans this week after he said he stood in line to vote but left without casting a ballot.
“We’ve been asked to be team players as Republicans for too long,” added Duncan, who also has criticized Trump’s grip on the party. [WaPo]
Can’t vote for Walker, that’s a key part of breaking the rule of toxic team politics. Then Duncan veers off.
“We’re done being team players. If we want to win, we need team leaders.”
Maybe someone lusting for power.
But it’s a tiny baby step in the right direction.