http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/elections/2016/08/09/donald-trump-susan-collins-republicans/88443642/

...Hillary Clinton's campaign is pushing the idea of "Republicans for 
Clinton" and highlighting announcements by anti-Trump GOP members.

"A growing number of Republicans are deciding that this election can’t be 
about party — it’s about doing what’s right for the country and electing 
someone who actually has the qualifications, fitness and temperament to 
serve as President and Commander-in-Chief,” Clinton spokesman Jesse 
Ferguson told USA TODAY.

On Tuesday, GOP donor Harry Sloan officially endorsed Clinton. Sloan, a 
former CEO of MGM, worked for previous Republican presidential nominees 
John McCain and Mitt Romney, and fundraised for Ohio Gov. John Kasich 
during this year's Republican primaries.

In an interview with USA TODAY, Sloan said Clinton's focus on energy and 
immigration aligned with his priorities and he was impressed with her on a 
variety of other topics. He also said that her focus on infrastructure and 
education spending could help her with business Republicans.

“I want to reach out to Republican leaders who held positions like I did on 
the 2016 campaigns, like I did with Kasich ... and bring them over," he 
said.

Clinton visited a South Florida health center with a Republican on Tuesday, 
Miami-Dade County Mayor Carlos Gimenez. While Gimenez — who backed Jeb Bush 
and then Marco Rubio in the primaries — has not endorsed Clinton, her press 
operation fired off a story from the Miami Herald announcing that the two 
would appear together.

And Cindy Guerra, a former Republican chair of Broward County in Florida, 
also backed Clinton Tuesday, telling the Miami Herald that “it’s a matter 
of country over party — as cheesy and goofy as that sounds.”

Later Tuesday a group of former Republican officials announced they'd be 
backing Clinton too. The group, R4C16 (Republicans for Clinton '16), 
included more than a dozen people.

James K. Glassman, who was under secretary of State for Public Diplomacy 
and Public Affairs in the George W. Bush Administration, said in a 
statement that a vote for Clinton was a vote for Republicans down ballot.

“In voting for Secretary Clinton in this election, we will also be voting 
for Republicans in Senate and House races. Retaining the Congress is 
critical for those of us who, unlike the man the GOP nominated, continue to 
believe in the principles of the party of Lincoln and Reagan – liberty and 
respect for the individual," he said.

Many of the "Never Trumps" are older Republicans who have seen the party 
turn more conservative in recent decades. That group ranges from Brent 
Scowcroft, a national security adviser to presidents Gerald Ford and George 
H.W. Bush, to William Ruckelshaus, who headed the Environmental Protection 
Agency for presidents Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan.

Other Trump opponents backed other candidates in the bruising Republican 
primaries. Rivals Ted Cruz and Kasich have pointedly refused to endorse the 
GOP nominee.

One GOP lawmaker, Rep. Scott Rigell of Virginia, has endorsed the 
Libertarian candidate, former New Mexico governor Gary Johnson.

Meanwhile, a new independent candidate, Evan McMullin — a former CIA 
operative and chief policy director for House Republicans — said in an open 
letter that while Clinton "is a corrupt career politician who has 
recklessly handled classified information," Trump is really no better.

"Given his obvious personal instability, putting him in command of our 
military and nuclear arsenal would be deeply irresponsible," McMullin said.

In her op-ed, Collins echoed other Republican critics in citing Trump's 
behavior, including his mocking of a reporter with a physical disability, 
his attacks on a federal judge's "Mexican heritage" and his dismissal of a 
Muslim couple who lost a son in Iraq.

Collins' announcement came shortly after 50 national security officials 
signed a letter citing Trump's questioning of military alliances, as well 
as his "erratic" behavior.

"He would be the most reckless president in American history," the letter 
said.

Asked about that letter on Fox Business Network, Trump said some of his 
critics "would have loved" to have been part of his campaign, but he didn't 
want them.

Previous elections have also seen party defections.

During the 1980s, President Ronald Reagan attracted the support of many 
Democrats, especially in the South, who were en route to becoming 
Republicans as part of a larger political realignment across the country. 
Once solidly Democratic, the South is now Republican territory.

Barry Goldwater, who brought a stronger conservative ideology to the 
Republican Party when he won its presidential nomination in 1964, also 
faced many critics inside the party. But political analyst Stuart 
Rothenberg pointed out that many of those critics in 1964 wound up 
endorsing — or at least not actively opposing — Goldwater, and that has not 
been the case this year with Trump.

"This is off the charts," he said.

The Republican opposition comes at a time when Trump is trying to build a 
coalition and address problems with large groups of voters, such as women 
and Hispanics.

GOP pollster Whit Ayres said recent GOP presidential election winners 
received at least 91% of the Republican vote —Trump is now in the upper 70s.

"He's about 10 to 15 points from where he needs to be among Republicans," 
said Ayres, who worked for Rubio during the primaries.

Jennifer Duffy, a senior editor with The Cook Political Report, said 
Republican opposition "doesn't help" Trump, but it's hard to assess the 
impact right now because polls are volatile in the wake of the recent party 
conventions.

"We don't know yet," she said.

Trump and his aides said his emphasis on trade and lost manufacturing jobs 
is helping him make inroads with blue-collar voters in states like 
Pennsylvania and Ohio. They also said many voters across the country resent 
the carping from the Republican "elite."

In his Fox interview, Trump said he doesn't plan to change the approach 
that got him this far.

"I certainly don't think it's appropriate to start changing all of the 
sudden when you've been winning," Trump said. "I mean, I've beat many 
people and now we're down to one. And we'll see how it all works out. But I 
think it's going to work out well."

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