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Friday, November 22, 2024

Sasse Pushes Back Against Nebraska GOP Over Plans to Censure Him

'Politics isn't about the weird worship of one guy...'

(Associated Press) U.S. Sen. Ben Sasse of Nebraska is pushing back against some fellow Republicans who want the state party to formally censure him for his outspoken criticism of President Donald Trump after the U.S. Capitol siege.

Sasse on Thursday posted a YouTube video response to county GOP activists in Nebraska who want him to be censured after he said Trump deserved some blame for inciting the riot.

The Nebraska Republican Party’s State Central Committee is expected to vote Feb. 13 on a possible censure. The committee has censured Sasse once before, in March 2016, after he leveled other criticism against then-candidate Trump.

“I’m not going to spend any time trying to talk you out of another censure,” Sasse said in the video. “I listen to Nebraskans every day, and very few of them are as angry about life as some of the people on this committee — not all of you, but a lot. Political addicts don’t represent most Nebraska conservatives.”

Sasse said party activists are “hacked off” that he condemned Trump’s statements to a crowd just before the riot and that he isn’t “bending the knee to one guy.” He also pointed to his voting record as one of the most conservative members of the U.S. Senate.

“Let’s be clear about why this is happening,” he said in the message to party activists. “It’s because I still believe, as you used to, that politics isn’t about the weird worship of one guy.”

Sasse has been openly critical of Trump, drawing criticism from some Nebraska Republicans who wanted him to be loyal to party candidates. Activists have also expressed frustration that Sasse used the GOP label and party resources when he ran for office in Nebraska, but then refused to support their chosen presidential nominee.

Sasse toned down the criticism briefly in 2019 and highlighted areas of agreement with the president when he was running for reelection against a pro-Trump primary challenger. Trump later endorsed Sasse, saying he had done a “wonderful job” representing Nebraska. But a year later, he called on Republicans to replace the senator after Sasse criticized him again.

Nebraska Republican Party Executive Director Ryan Hamilton said the party’s state central committee will decide whether to censure Sasse by a membership vote.

Hamilton said the party has received thousands of phone and email messages expressing dissatisfaction with Sasse after he said Trump “consistently lied” and promoted conspiracy theories after he lost the presidential election. Hamilton said he was aware of at least eight different petitions from local party activists calling for Sasse to be censured again.

One of the censorship motions came from Scotts Bluff County Republicans in rural, western Nebraska, one of the most pro-Trump areas of the country. Some party officials have said they’re frustrated by what they see as Sasse’s unwillingness to address them directly.

In an open letter to Sasse, County GOP Chairwoman Kolene Woodward said some local Republicans were frustrated by his frequent criticism of the former president.

“You were elected to represent the people of Nebraska who overwhelmingly voted for President Trump,” Woodward wrote in the letter. “Your actions are a selfish, political ploy.”

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