Senator Ben Sasse admits he 'regularly' considers leaving the GOP

Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.) acknowledged on Saturday that he “regularly” considers leaving the Republican Party, making the admission as part of a series of tweets in which he decried the increasing role conspiracy theories play in today’s politics and media.

Sasse, elected to his seat in 2014, said he feared the U.S. was “headed toward a place where hefty majorities of both sides of the electorate are going to regularly embrace unsupported and blatantly false assertions.”

When one of his followers asked him if he ever considered switching parties, just as she switched from Democrat to no-party, Sasse replied: “yep, regularly consider it.”

Sasse is one of President Donald Trump’s most vocal Republican critics in Congress. He attracted attention during the 2016 presidential campaign when he said he would not vote for Trump but instead would back a third-party candidate. Since Trump’s election, Sasse regularly taken issue with the president’s behavior ― last year, for instance, the lawmaker criticized conservatives for backing Trump’s attacks on the media.

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Last week, Sasse called out the president for assailing Attorney General Jeff Session over the Justice Department pursuing federal criminal charges against two Republican House members, both of whom were early and staunch supporters of Trump.

Sasse has also identified himself as an “independent conservative who caucuses with the Republicans.”

Still, even as he doesn’t hesitate to publicly lash out at Trump, Sasse can be counted on to back the administration’s legislative agenda. According to the FiveThirtyEight website’s congressional tracker, Sasse votes in favor of Trump’s policies 86.7 percent of the time. He also is expected to vote to confirm Trump’s controversial Supreme Court nominee, Brett Kavanaugh.

The 46-year-old Sasse, who’s up for re-election in 2020, insisted last week that he’s not focused on his own political future.

“I’m the second or third most conservative person in the Senate by voting record, and I don’t hide any of that,” he said during a Wednesday appearance on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe.” “But most of what I care about isn’t stuff that we’re actually debating in the Congress. So I’m not really that interested in incumbency.”

Meanwhile, the senator’s advisors old The Washington Post not to take seriously his suggestion that he might abandon the Republican Party.

  • This article originally appeared on HuffPost.

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