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Texas Two-Step: Dallas Mayor Dumps Dems, 'America's Cities Need Republicans' [READ IT]

By Eric Bolling Staff

So long, Dems!

Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson penned an op-ed for The Wall Street Journal this week announcing he’s leaving the Democratic Party; “America’s cities need Republicans” he writes.

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“I don’t believe I can stay on the sidelines any longer,” Johnson writes. “I have always tried to be honest and say what I think is right for my city. The future of America’s great urban centers depends on the willingness of the nation’s mayors to champion law and order and practice fiscal conservatism.”

“Our cities desperately need the genuine commitment to these principles (as opposed to the inconsistent, poll-driven commitment of many Democrats) that has long been a defining characteristic of the GOP.”

“With my change in party affiliation, I recognize that the number of Republican mayors leading the nation’s 10 largest cities has increased from zero to one,” Johnson writes. “This is hardly a red wave.

“But it is clear that the nation and its cities have reached a time for choosing. And the overwhelming majority of Americans who call our cities home deserve to have real choices — not ‘progressive’ echo chambers — at city hall.”

“Mayors and other local elected officials have failed to make public safety a priority or to exercise fiscal restraint,” Johnson writes. “Most of these local leaders are proud Democrats who view cities as laboratories for liberalism rather than as havens for opportunity and free enterprise.

“Too often, local tax dollars are spent on policies that exacerbate homelessness, coddle criminals, and make it harder for ordinary people to make a living. And too many local Democrats insist on virtue signaling — proposing half-baked government programs that aim to solve every single societal ill — and on finding new ways to thumb their noses at Republicans at the state or federal level. Enough. This makes for good headlines, but not for safer, stronger, more vibrant cities.”

Read the full op-ed over at The Wall Street Journal:



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