Democratic Chair Says it Would Be ‘Political Suicide’ for Trump to Quit Race

Donna Brazile, interim chair of the Democratic National Committee, said the Republican Party is stuck with Donald Trump as their presidential nominee because dropping him at this late date would be “political suicide.”

Many top Republican officeholders have condemned Trump for lewd comments he made in 2005 on a video released Friday, with some calling on the GOP nominee to withdraw from the race to allow vice presidential candidate Mike Pence to ascend to the top of the ticket.

But Brazile suggested that is not a realistic scenario as early voting has already started and ballots in states across the country have been finalized with Trump listed as the Republican presidential nominee.

“It would be political suicide for Donald Trump to step down right now,” she said.

But Brazile suggested that is not a realistic scenario since early voting has already started and ballots in states across the country have been finalized with Trump listed as the Republican presidential nominee.

“Absentee ballots are being mailed out,” Brazile said. “Mike Pence can step in all he wants, but the problem is how do you — how do you start to tell voters in 30 days that they can’t vote for the person whose name might appear on the ballot but they have to vote for someone? … It would be very confusing.”

The Democratic Party chair said the lewd comments Trump made about women in a 2005 video released Friday should not have surprised Republican leaders as they are similar to remarks the GOP nominee has made about women and minorities throughout the campaign.

“This is who Donald Trump truly is,” she said. “This is not a changed man” since 2005.

Brazile said she believes Democrats have a chance of winning control of both houses of Congress in November.

And, she sought to deflect questions about the leak of apparent excerpts of private speeches that Clinton gave to Wall Street banks in recent years. Brazile said she hasn’t read the excerpts because, she argued, the texts may have been gotten through Russian hacking.

“I don’t know if it’s true or not true,” she said of whether the speech excerpts, released Friday by WikiLeaks, are authentic. “I refuse to open them.”