Rep. Mac Thornberry, a Texas Republican who serves as the ranking member on the House Armed Services Committee, has been slightly more interested than most GOP lawmakers to display a degree of independence. Thornberry, for example, insisted that Donald Trump could not legally raid the Pentagon budget for border-wall funds.
The Texan was also among the first congressional Republicans to acknowledge Joe Biden’s presidential victory.
This week, Thornberry sat down with the Dallas Morning News and expressed discomfort with many of his colleagues’ recent antics.
He opined that most of his fellow Republicans who signed the amicus brief supporting the Paxton-led lawsuit “really didn’t think about it that much.” Instead, he said, “it was, ‘OK, this was a way to support Trump. I’m going to do it.’ And it’s that mindless sort of obedience – and to some extent it happens in both parties, but it’s more evident now in the Republican Party – that No. 1, doesn’t do credit to the individuals, but secondly, it undermines our institutions,” he said.
In reference to the failed anti-election lawsuit filed by his home state’s Republican attorney general, Ken Paxton, Thornberry added that it was a “totally bogus legal argument.”
As notable as it is to see a sitting GOP congressman make comments like these on the record, all of this comes with two key caveats.









