- Republican Senator Pat Toomey urged his party not to nominate Donald Trump as its presidential nominee in 2024
- Toomey is not seeking another term in office and was one of seven Republican senators to vote to impeach Trump over January 6 riotĀ
- ‘The president’s behavior was completely unacceptable, so I don’t think he should be the nominee to lead the party in 2024,’ he told CNBC
- Trump has given his 2024 plans but has hinted he could run againĀ
Republican Senator Pat Toomey, who is not seeking another term in office, urged his party not to nominateĀ Donald TrumpĀ as its presidential candidate in 2024, calling his behavior in the aftermath of theĀ 2020 electionĀ ‘completely unacceptable.’
‘I think that the future of our party is to be a party of ideas, and not to be a party about any one individual, and I think we will learn a lot from the next set of primaries,’ he toldĀ CNBCĀ at theĀ Ambrosetti Forum inĀ ItalyĀ on Friday.
‘I think after what happened post-2020 election, I think the president’s behavior was completely unacceptable, so I don’t think he should be the nominee to lead the party in 2024,’ he added.
Toomey was one of seven GOP senators who voted to convict Trump in his second impeachment trial, in charges that the former president helped incite the January 6th riot at the Capitol, where his supporters tried to stop the certification of Joe Biden’s victory. The entire Senate ultimately voted to acquit Trump.
The Pennsylvania senator was a staunch Trump ally earlier in the former president’s administration.
He said he drifted from Trump because the former president moved away from conservative policies.
‘It is President Trump who departed from Republican orthodoxy and conservative orthodoxy in a variety of ways. I stuck to the conservative views that I’ve had for a long time, he had a different point of view on matters such as trade and sometimes immigration and other things,’ he said.
Trump has not revealed his 2024 plans but has said he is considering another run at the Oval Office.
The Republican field of those seeking the GOP nomination is expected become more clear after the 2022 midterm election.
Trump still holds significant sway in the Republican Party and his loyal tribe of MAGA supporters are expected to be a force in the GOP primary.