Spurred by former GOP senators John Danforth, William Cohen, and the late Alan Simpson (who died on March 14), the group Our Republican Legacy was formed a year ago, and now is working on getting out their message.
โWhat gives me hope is it was impossible [for a Republican] to beat Donald Trump in 2020 or 2024, but he will not be the Republican nominee in 2028,โ said Chris Vance, national senior adviser for Our Republican Legacy, in a video call with the Phoenix on Friday.
โAnd people just donโt seem to be able to appreciate that in a couple of years, everything is going to look different โ the Republicans will probably have lost the House. Trump will be a pathetic, weak lame duck with a bunch of other Republicans running for president and drawing all the attention. Thereโs going to be a wide-open war for control of the Republican Party, and we are mobilizing now to fight that war.โ “Thereโs going to be a wide-open war for control of the Republican Party, and we are mobilizing now to fight that war.”
Greg Wilson, a former U.S. Treasury Department official in the Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush administrations, is serving as Our Republican Legacyโs Florida chairman. A co-chair of the Republicans for Harris campaign in Florida last year, he wrote an op-ed in the Miami Herald warning that the trade tariffs Trump was touting in his campaign were dangerous.
โHe was going to do a better job on the economy than Vice President Harris was going to do,โ Wilson tells the Phoenix.
โAnd where are we today? The โBig Beautiful billโ is going to boost the deficit. Itโs already spooking the bond market, which is quite important to Treasury financing. All the uncertainty and the chaos heโs creating โ Iโm predicting thatโs going to be untenable for our economy. If weโre lucky, weโll avoid a recession. If weโre not lucky, weโre on the skids to a depression and global trade wars.โ
Our Republican Legacy held its first national committee meeting last month in Washington. D.C., with guest speaker former Republican National Committee Chairman and Maryland Lt. Gov. Michael Steele. Among its founding members are former Florida Republican U.S. Sen. Mel Martinez, according to its website.
Somewhat of a bust
Ever since Trump entered the Republican race for president a decade ago, the โNever Trumpโ movement has been somewhat of a bust. Some Republicans left the party. Some became independents; others, like former Pinellas County U.S. Rep David Jolly, have now become Democrats.So, whether this particular movement will gain traction seems questionable.
Vance acknowledges the skepticism. The former chairman of the Washington state Republican Party and the GOP candidate for U.S. Senate in Washington in 2016 (he lost to Democratic incumbent Patty Murray), Vance says that his group is for people who want to remain Republicans and fight to change the party eventually over time.
โI think no matter how difficult or unlikely that sounds, it has to be done,โ he said. โThis country cannot long endure if one of the parties is an authoritarian threat to the Constitution. So, we have to take on this fight. And it is not going back to George W. Bush, itโs applying classic, core conservative principals to todayโs problems.โ
The organization wonโt weigh in on every political battle that surfaces, Vance said. Instead, its North Star is laid out in โFive Core Principlesโ โ The Constitution; Unity; Fiscal Responsibility; Free Enterprise; and Peace Through Strength.
Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Florida Phoenix maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Michael Moline for questions: info@floridaphoenix.com.
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This article appears in Jun 12-18, 2025.

