The Washington Post brought on Jennifer Rubin as its columnist to represent the conservative point of view. She has been a reliable voice from the right. But she cannot stomach Donald Trump’s lies or the party leaders who excuse him.

The last straw for her was Trump’s announcement that Barack Obama was born in the United States. He took credit for “ending” the birther movement that he had done so much to build over the past five years, and he (and his surrogates) immediately blamed Hillary Clinton for starting the birther movement. If that was true, why would President Obama have invited her to become Secretary of State?

If you read the excuses and defenses of his surrogate, you will recognize a familiar pattern of behavior: deflect, blame, deflect, blame.

When Trump doesn’t want to answer a question about a decision he made, an action he took, he attacks Hillary Clinton or Obama.

During the Commander-in-Chief Forum, Trump was asked about his admiration for Putin. Matt Lauer listed some of the egregious things that Putin has done, and Trump interjected, “Obama has done worse.” Lauer was not asking about Obama, he was asking Trump why he admired a man who murders journalists and political opponents and invades a neighbor state. Trump: “Obama has done worse.”

The party of Trump, Rubin argues, can never inherit the mantle of the party of Lincoln. Those who followed him meekly will be disgraced; those who said #neverTrump will rebuild the center-right party. Not liars. Not the alt-right. Not racists. Not misogynists.

She concludes:

As for the fate of the GOP, the evidence mounts that it cannot go merrily on its way after the election. A party that would sanction people who call out a racist deserves to go out of business. A party whose congressional leaders remain supportive of a nominee who incites violence, perpetuates racism, blatantly, and traffics in conspiracy theories loses the moral authority to govern.