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Ryan Brown
Local Republicans have joined the wave of county parties rebuking Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., after he voted to convict former President Donald Trump at his impeachment trial this month.
Toomey drew outrage from his own party after the Feb. 13 vote, in which he joined 50 Democrats and six fellow Republican senators who claimed Trump is guilty of inciting an insurrection.
County-level Republican parties across the state have since voted to formally censure Toomey, joining allies in other states who have publicly attacked or sought the removal of Republican lawmakers who turned against Trump.
“(Toomey) voted against acquitting President Donald J. Trump in the politically motivated Senate impeachment trial, inflicting tremendous damage to the Pennsylvania GOP and the Republican committee of all 67 counties,” the Centre County Republican Party said in an official statement released Feb. 14. “Toomey continues to use the Republican banner while actively working against con
bkibler@altoonamirror.com
Local Republicans condemned the storming of the nation’s Capitol on Wednesday by supporters of President Donald Trump, an attack in which protestors overcame police, broke windows, roamed hallways, entered offices and a legislative chamber and interrupted debate on certifying Trump’s recent electoral college loss, sending lawmakers scrambling for safety a mob scene that left a woman dead after being shot.
The march occurred after a rally at the nearby White House in which Trump called the election “rigged” by “radical Democrats” and the “fake news media,” and suggested his listeners “walk down … to the Capitol” to cheer on lawmakers planning to object to the election results while “we’re probably not going to be cheering so much” for the others, wrote The Palm Beach Post.