It’s always helpful when Republican members of Congress leave Capitol Hill and begin speaking their minds without fear of political consequences. Take this New York Times report from earlier in the week, for example.
By the summer of 2017, Dave Trott, a two-term Republican congressman, was worried enough about President Trump’s erratic behavior and his flailing attempts to repeal the Affordable Care Act that he criticized the president in a closed-door meeting with fellow G.O.P. lawmakers.
The response was instantaneous — but had nothing to do with the substance of Mr. Trott’s concerns. “Dave, you need to know somebody has already told the White House what you said,” he recalled a colleague telling him.
Note the context: Trott expressed criticisms of Donald Trump in private. He was nevertheless warned to watch his step because the president’s supporters, on the lookout, were likely to report the congressman’s transgressions. Republicans were expected to show loyalty to Trump at all times, even behind closed doors. A healthy political environment it was not.
It wasn’t long before Trott announced his retirement. In the 2018 midterm elections, he was replaced by a Democrat in a GOP-friendly district.
The former congressman has not, however, forgotten about the lessons he learned and his impressions of those in positions of authority. “Trump is emotionally, intellectually and psychologically unfit for office,” Trott told the Times, “and I’m sure a lot of Republicans feel the same way.”









