Libertarian VP Candidate: Whatever You Do, Don’t Vote For Trump

Libertarian vice presidential candidate Bill Weld, the former governor of Massachusetts, talks to the Times-Union editorial board on Thursday Sept. 22, 2016 in Jacksonville, Fla. Weld is running with former New Mexic... Libertarian vice presidential candidate Bill Weld, the former governor of Massachusetts, talks to the Times-Union editorial board on Thursday Sept. 22, 2016 in Jacksonville, Fla. Weld is running with former New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson. (Bob Mack /The Florida Times-Union via AP) MORE LESS
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Accepting that his presidential bid will fail, Libertarian vice presidential candidate Bill Weld on Tuesday obliquely urged voters to vote for Hillary Clinton.

In a Tuesday statement addressed to “those in the electorate who remain torn between two so-called major party candidates,” the former Massachusetts governor told Republicans not to vote for the GOP nominee out of “fear for our country.”

“After careful observation and reflection, I have come to believe that Donald Trump, if elected President of the United States, would not be able to stand up to this pressure and this criticism without becoming unhinged and unable to perform competently the duties of his office,” he said at a Boston press conference.

Weld ticks off a long list of what he sees as Trump’s flaws, including his childish response to criticism, divisive rhetoric about immigrants and minorities, instability, and lack of familiarity with policy.

While Weld said he will see his bid with Gary Johnson through to Election Day, he acknowledged that the Libertarian Party ticket, which has languished far behind in the polls, will not break “the two party monopoly” this year. He announced in early October that he would spend the rest of the campaign cycle speaking out against Trump.

Some observers interpreted the last paragraph of his statement as a winking request for voters not to cast ballots for his own running mate.

“Every citizen must be aware of the power and responsibility of each individual vote,” Weld writes. “This is not the time to cast a jocular or feel-good vote for a man whom you may have briefly found entertaining.”

Though Weld goes on to mention Trump by name, his comments could also describe Johnson, who captured headlines with his bumbling responses to foreign policy questions and odd interview antics.

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