Republican Lawmaker Leaves The Republican Party To Become A Democrat

A Republican lawmaker in Oregon has announced that he's switching parties.


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In a sign that things are getting a bit too crazy in today’s Republican Party, a GOP elected official in Oregon has announced that he is switching parties.

State Rep. Cyrus Javadi, a state lawmaker in Oregon, has announced that he is leaving the Republican Party and becoming a Democrat.

In a statement to Newsweek, Rep. Javadi said that he “switched because the Republican Party abandoned the principles that drew me to it in the first place: limited government, fiscal responsibility, free speech, free trade, and, above all, the rule of law.”

Javadi’s switch helps the Democrats increase their majority in the Oregon state house, where they now hold 37 out of 60 seats.

The lawmaker had first announced the move in a Substack post on September 5.

“Before the conspiracy mills start cranking: no, it’s not because I lost a primary. No, it’s not because I binge-watched Rachel Maddow and saw the light. And no, I haven’t forgotten who I am, who I serve, or the values that got me here,” he wrote. What’s changed isn’t me. It’s the party I once called home.

Much of Javadi’s complaints about his former party seems to be related to state concerns.

“Every priority for Oregon’s North Coast, nearly every single one, ran into opposition from my own party. Protecting Medicaid benefits for the nearly 60% of children in Tillamook and Clatsop counties? Opposed. Keeping rural hospitals afloat? Opposed. Preserving students’ access to books that reflect who they are? Opposed. Protecting the First Amendment rights of people different from ourselves? Opposed,” he wrote in the Substack post. “Not because the policies were flawed. But because helping me deliver for my district didn’t fit the Republican Party’s agenda.”

Democrats welcomed him to his new party:

Photo courtesy of Rep. Cyrus Javadi’s official photo. 


Stephen Silver
Stephen Silver is an award-winning journalist, essayist and film critic, and contributor to the Philadelphia Inquirer, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Broad Street Review and Splice Today. The co-founder of the Philadelphia Film Critics Circle, Stephen lives in suburban Philadelphia with his wife and two sons. Stephen has authored thousands of articles that focus on politics, technology, and the economy.

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