St. Louis Post-Dispatch Editorial: Maryland’s Larry Hogan Puts His Country First

In case you missed it, earlier this week the St. Louis Post-Dispatch editorial urged leaders in the Republican party to follow Governor Hogan’s message of ensuring the party moves past Trump and moves back to focusing on core conservative issues.

According to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch editorial, “Hogan’s advice is worth heeding. Republicans of good faith must coalesce around one reasonable Trump alternative rather than risk fragmenting the non-MAGA vote among multiple moderates…It’s urgent for the sake of both the party and the country that some Hogan-like hero arise.”

Governor Hogan also recently discussed his vision for the party with David Drucker on The Dispatch podcast.

Read the full St. Louis Post-Dispatch editorial here and below.

St. Louis Post-Dispatch Editorial: Maryland’s Larry Hogan Puts His Country First

Editorial Board

“Former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan has been a beacon of anti-Trump sanity in a Republican Party that has too little of it these days. In that sense, his announcement that he won’t seek the 2024 presidential nomination, made in a New York Times op-ed Sunday, is something of a disappointment. But his reasoning is valid: Having multiple Republicans in the primary race could create ‘another multicar pileup,’ giving former President Donald Trump a path to again capture the nomination — an outcome Hogan rightly views as unacceptable.

Hogan’s advice is worth heeding. Republicans of good faith must coalesce around one reasonable Trump alternative rather than risk fragmenting the non-MAGA vote among multiple moderates. Hogan has apparently surmised, probably correctly, that he doesn’t have the national base for it. But it’s crucial that the party find that candidate.

Hogan, who served eight years as Maryland’s governor before his term-limited tenure ended in January, has long been among the GOP’s most vocal critics of Trump. While Hogan’s essay Sunday cites family stress as a reason for deciding not to seek the presidency, he expounds extensively on the urgency of unifying the party against Trump.

‘Since Donald Trump won the nomination in 2016, I have fought to make clear that our party cannot be successful if we put personality before principle, if our elected officials are afraid to say publicly what they freely admit behind closed doors,’ he writes, ‘and if we can’t learn from our mistakes because of the political cost of admitting facts to be true.’

Hogan bemoans that the GOP ‘didn’t even bother passing a campaign platform’ in 2020 — and how could it, really, when long-held Republican principles of respect for the law, personal responsibility and morality had been rendered so clearly hypocritical by the party’s standard bearer?

‘I still believe in a Republican Party that stands for fiscal responsibility and getting the government off our backs …,’ Hogan writes. ‘I still believe in a Republican Party that backs law enforcement and the rule of law. … And I still believe in a Republican Party that upholds and honors perhaps our most sacred tradition: the peaceful transfer of power.’

All of which is bluntly, often angrily rejected today by the Trump wing of the Republican Party.

America needs two functioning political parties, and at the moment, a large portion of one is more accurately defined as a right-wing cult of personality. No one in the current field of GOP hopefuls looks to be both interested in and capable of changing that. It’s urgent for the sake of both the party and the country that some Hogan-like hero arise.”