Nevertrump

2016Hashtag / political movementdead

Also known as: NeverTrump · Never Trump · NeverTrump Movement

#NeverTrump is a 2016 Twitter hashtag and political movement uniting conservative Republicans against Donald Trump's presidential campaign after his Nevada primary victory.

#NeverTrump is a political hashtag that trended worldwide on Twitter on February 26, 2016, rallying conservative Republicans who refused to support Donald Trump's presidential bid. What started as an organic eruption of opposition after Trump's Nevada primary victory grew into an organized movement with its own super PAC, prominent media voices, and deep fractures within the Republican Party that lasted well beyond the 2016 election cycle.

TL;DR

#NeverTrump is a political hashtag that trended worldwide on Twitter on February 26, 2016, rallying conservative Republicans who refused to support Donald Trump's presidential bid.

Overview

#NeverTrump was a hashtag used by conservatives and Republicans who pledged to never vote for Donald Trump, even if he won the party's presidential nomination. The movement drew from several factions within the party: fiscal conservatives who objected to Trump's protectionist trade positions20, social conservatives who questioned his sincerity on abortion and faith10, national security hawks who rejected his isolationist foreign policy23, and establishment Republicans who feared he would drag down candidates in congressional and state races13.

The hashtag worked as both a political declaration and a rallying point for organizing. Users would tweet #NeverTrump alongside their personal reasons for opposition, creating a running public ledger of Republican dissent. The movement's ecosystem eventually included op-eds, super PACs, third-party candidate discussions, and eventually the Lincoln Project, an anti-Trump group that raised tens of millions of dollars during the 2020 election cycle17.

Trump drew conservative criticism almost immediately after announcing his presidential candidacy in June 2015. Writers at the National Review made opposing Trump an editorial policy, with contributor Jonah Goldberg warning that Trump's supporters were "being conned and played"10. Mona Charen, also writing for the magazine, called Trump "a blowhard with all the nuance of a grenade"10. Early objections focused on Trump's departures from Republican orthodoxy: his past support for single-payer healthcare10, his pro-choice history, his advocacy for an assault weapons ban, and his donations to Bill and Hillary Clinton's campaigns and foundation10.

The crowded Republican primary field, which at one point exceeded seventeen candidates, divided traditional conservative voters and let Trump win early contests despite polls showing a majority of Republican voters would have preferred another nominee15. Super Tuesday exit poll data from states like Arkansas and Virginia showed that more voters would have been satisfied with a Rubio or Cruz nomination than a Trump nomination, but the split field kept handing Trump victories15.

On February 26, 2016, the hashtag #NeverTrump began trending worldwide on Twitter1. The immediate trigger was Trump's commanding victory in the Nevada caucuses, compounded by New Jersey Governor Chris Christie's surprise endorsement4. The hashtag caught fire across partisan lines. Presidential candidate Marco Rubio shared a link encouraging supporters to add their names to the cause, and conservative commentator Erick Erickson tweeted that he was "proud to play a role in getting #NeverTrump trending"1.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter
Key People
Unknown, popularized by Ben Sasse, Erick Erickson
Date
2016
Year
2016

Trump drew conservative criticism almost immediately after announcing his presidential candidacy in June 2015. Writers at the National Review made opposing Trump an editorial policy, with contributor Jonah Goldberg warning that Trump's supporters were "being conned and played". Mona Charen, also writing for the magazine, called Trump "a blowhard with all the nuance of a grenade". Early objections focused on Trump's departures from Republican orthodoxy: his past support for single-payer healthcare, his pro-choice history, his advocacy for an assault weapons ban, and his donations to Bill and Hillary Clinton's campaigns and foundation.

The crowded Republican primary field, which at one point exceeded seventeen candidates, divided traditional conservative voters and let Trump win early contests despite polls showing a majority of Republican voters would have preferred another nominee. Super Tuesday exit poll data from states like Arkansas and Virginia showed that more voters would have been satisfied with a Rubio or Cruz nomination than a Trump nomination, but the split field kept handing Trump victories.

On February 26, 2016, the hashtag #NeverTrump began trending worldwide on Twitter. The immediate trigger was Trump's commanding victory in the Nevada caucuses, compounded by New Jersey Governor Chris Christie's surprise endorsement. The hashtag caught fire across partisan lines. Presidential candidate Marco Rubio shared a link encouraging supporters to add their names to the cause, and conservative commentator Erick Erickson tweeted that he was "proud to play a role in getting #NeverTrump trending".

How It Spread

The hashtag's overnight success turned "NeverTrump" into a collective label for anti-Trump conservatives. Major outlets including the Washington Post, Fox News, and the New York Times began using it as shorthand for right-of-center opposition to Trump's candidacy.

In early March 2016, a group of grassroots activists launched the #NeverTrump PAC, a super PAC dedicated to blocking Trump from the nomination. The organization outlined a three-pronged strategy: social media campaigns, grassroots mobilization, and working the Republican delegate process to deny Trump the 1,237 delegates needed for a first-ballot victory at the convention. Pierre Omidyar, the founder of eBay, later donated $100,000 to the PAC.

After Trump's strong Super Tuesday showing on March 1, anti-Trump groups moved to attack him with millions in television ads in Florida, which held its primary on March 15. Three groups reserved $5 million of airtime in the state, with Our Principles PAC releasing a web ad titled "Unelectable" that previewed how Democrats would use Trump's own statements against him. The PAC raised more than $8.4 million in March, expanding from just three donors in January to over fifty.

Conservative media figures staked out public positions. Ben Shapiro of the Daily Wire declared he would never vote for Trump, framing it as a defense of conservatism's future: "If Trump wins, he guts the only movement we have. If Hillary wins, there may be a future for our movement yet". Glenn Beck said he would refuse to vote for any ticket that included Trump, even with Ted Cruz at the top. Mark Levin, who had initially criticized NeverTrumpers, reversed course in April 2016 and declared himself officially #NeverTrump after Trump ally Roger Stone published what Levin considered a smear piece against him.

FiveThirtyEight's coverage drew a useful distinction between two strands of opposition. "#StopTrump" referred to efforts focused on denying Trump the nomination through the delegate process, while "#NeverTrump" described a harder line: refusing to vote for Trump under any circumstances, even as the nominee. Some outlets used the terms interchangeably, though the distinction mattered to movement participants.

By late April 2016, The Hill published a partial list of prominent Republicans in the #NeverTrump camp, including 2012 nominee Mitt Romney, Senator Ben Sasse, Governor Charlie Baker, and several sitting House members. Concerns about down-ballot damage were widespread. Arizona Senator Jeff Flake said he viewed the likely Trump nomination "with concern and dread," and exit polling in swing states showed roughly 40% of non-Trump Republican voters were reluctant to turn out for him in November.

How to Use This Meme

#NeverTrump is a declaration, not a meme template. People typically use it by:

1

Tweeting the hashtag alongside a personal statement explaining their opposition to Trump

2

Sharing articles, polls, or Trump quotes that reinforce the case against him

3

Adding #NeverTrump to profile bios or display names as a permanent stance marker

4

Signing online petitions or pledges not to vote for Trump, which groups like the #NeverTrump PAC used to build contact lists

Cultural Impact

The #NeverTrump movement marked a rare moment of organized, public rebellion within a major American political party during a presidential primary. It generated heavy coverage from outlets across the political spectrum, with the Washington Post, New York Times, Fox News, CNN, and NPR all dedicating substantial reporting to the movement's trajectory.

The movement's failure to stop Trump's nomination, and his subsequent general election victory, reshaped how political commentators discuss intra-party opposition. The Cook Political Report's pre-election analysis noted Trump's "historic unpopularity with wide swaths of the electorate," including women, millennials, independents, and Latinos, but those weaknesses weren't enough to prevent his win.

The Lincoln Project, a direct outgrowth of the 2016 movement, produced viral attack ads targeting Trump and Republican senators like Lindsey Graham in the 2020 cycle. The group's ad portraying Graham as a "parasite" feeding off Trump drew significant attention but also criticism from the right. 60 Minutes aired a segment on the Lincoln Project, and the New Yorker published a 7,300-word profile of the organization.

Erick Erickson's push for a third-party alternative in 2016 foreshadowed ongoing debates about whether the Republican Party could sustain a coalition that included both Trump's populist base and traditional fiscal and social conservatives. The movement also exposed the gap between Republican voters and the party's donor and commentator class, a dynamic that Jindal acknowledged when he wrote that "we have failed to convince or demonstrate the wisdom of our conservative policies to the voters, and we are thus partially responsible for the rise of Trump".

Full History

The #NeverTrump movement reached its crisis point on May 3, 2016, when Ted Cruz dropped out of the Republican primary after losing Indiana. RNC Chairman Reince Priebus declared Trump the presumptive nominee and called on Republicans to "unite and focus on defeating" Hillary Clinton. For many in the movement, this was exactly the scenario they had dreaded, and reactions split along predictable lines.

Some Republicans capitulated. Former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee went "all in" for Trump, dismissing the "#NeverTrump nonsense" and telling holdouts: "This isn't Burger King. You don't get it all the time just like you want it". Bobby Jindal, who had once mocked Trump in some of the harshest language of any primary candidate, endorsed him while calling it the "second-worst" option available. Jindal's op-ed was notable for its blunt framing: "I am not pretending that Mr. Trump has suddenly become a conservative champion or even a reliable Republican. He is completely unpredictable".

Others dug in harder. Erick Erickson called for a third-party candidate to give disenchanted Republicans a reason to show up at the polls and protect down-ballot races. In an NPR interview, Erickson argued that roughly 40% of Republican voters would refuse to support Trump, and without an alternative on the ballot, congressional and state legislative races would suffer catastrophic losses. Over at the Washington Free Beacon, journalist Lachlan Markay burned his Republican voter registration on camera. Former John McCain staffer Mark Salter and RedState blogger Ben Howe declared grudging support for Hillary Clinton.

Weekly Standard editor Bill Kristol emerged as the most visible organizer for a third-party alternative. In early May, he met privately with Mitt Romney at the J.W. Marriott hotel in Washington to discuss an independent presidential bid. "He came pretty close to being elected president so I thought he may consider doing it," Kristol told reporters, adding that he also wanted Romney's endorsement for any alternative candidate that might emerge. Kristol had also courted retired Marines Corps General James Mattis, who declined to run. At a public event afterward, Romney told attendees: "I am dismayed at where we are now. I wish we had better choices".

The electoral math painted a grim picture for Trump at the time. A CNN/ORC poll completed before Trump's Indiana victory showed Clinton leading 54% to 41%, her largest margin since July 2015. Both candidates were historically unpopular, with 56% of voters viewing Trump unfavorably, and most supporters of each candidate saying their preference was driven more by opposition to the other side than genuine enthusiasm. The Cook Political Report shifted ratings in 13 states toward Democrats, placing enough electoral votes in the "Lean Democratic" column for a Clinton majority before the general election campaign even began.

The movement's organized wing struggled with money after Indiana. Anti-Trump groups had spent $2.8 million in the state, plus an additional $3.3 million backing Cruz, yet Trump won decisively. Rob Stutzman, a California strategist organizing stop-Trump efforts, admitted that "Indiana will influence our fundraising" even before the results came in. California's June 7 primary, with its 172 delegates, was supposed to be the movement's backstop, but Trump needed fewer than 200 additional delegates to clinch, making the math nearly impossible.

Within the movement, a counter-hashtag emerged. #NeverHillary was adopted by conservatives who, while unhappy with Trump, viewed Clinton as the greater threat. Fox News commentator John Gibson urged NeverTrumpers to "come to your senses," arguing that stopping Clinton should take priority over internal Republican disputes. Jindal's CNN opinion piece acknowledged that the Republican establishment bore some blame for Trump's rise, arguing that the party "failed to convince or demonstrate the wisdom of our conservative policies to the voters".

The NeverTrump identity persisted well beyond 2016. By 2020, the Lincoln Project, founded by Republican operatives including Rick Wilson and Steve Schmidt, was spending tens of millions on anti-Trump advertising. Bill Kristol's Defending Democracy Together organization, funded in part by Pierre Omidyar, operated several anti-Trump outlets including The Bulwark and Republican Voters Against Trump. Critics on the right dismissed these groups as grift operations, noting that most of the Lincoln Project's nearly $40 million in third-quarter 2020 fundraising came from left-wing donors rather than disaffected Republicans. Trump won the 2016 election despite the movement's efforts, and the term "NeverTrumper" became a fixture of American political vocabulary, used as a pejorative by Trump supporters and as a badge of principle by holdouts.

Fun Facts

Marco Rubio, while still an active presidential candidate, shared a #NeverTrump sign-up link on Twitter, making him the only sitting GOP candidate to openly promote the hashtag.

When asked whether someone other than Trump could still be nominated at the July convention, RNC Chairman Reince Priebus told reporters: "Nothing's impossible," before quickly adding it was "highly, highly doubtful".

Polls taken during Super Tuesday showed that in Arkansas, 56% of Republican voters would have been satisfied with either a Cruz or Rubio nomination, but only 47% were okay with Trump as the nominee, yet Trump still won the state.

Ben Shapiro compared backing Trump to the "organ donor ethical problem," asking whether it's moral to kill one healthy doctor to harvest organs for five dying patients: "The pro-Trump answer: kill conservatism to save the country".

Indiana, where Cruz made his last stand, had both the highest share of evangelical Protestants of any remaining state and the highest share of manufacturing jobs in the country, making it a uniquely split battleground between Cruz's and Trump's bases.

Derivatives & Variations

#NeverHillary / #NeverClinton

Counter-hashtags used by conservatives who argued that preventing a Clinton presidency was more important than opposing Trump[24].

#StopTrump

A related but distinct effort focused on denying Trump the nomination through the delegate process, rather than pledging to never vote for him[9].

#WeCanDoBetter

Senator Ben Sasse's alternative hashtag criticizing both parties' nominees[4].

The Lincoln Project

An anti-Trump PAC founded in 2019 by former Republican operatives, widely seen as the institutional successor to the NeverTrump movement, raising nearly $40 million in Q3 2020 alone[17].

Republican Voters Against Trump

A project under Bill Kristol's Defending Democracy Together umbrella that ran swing-state ads featuring self-described lifelong Republicans planning to vote for Joe Biden in 2020[17].

#NeverTrump PAC

A grassroots super PAC formed in March 2016 specifically named after the hashtag, focused on social media campaigns and delegate strategy[2].

Frequently Asked Questions

References (32)

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    $Trumpencyclopedia
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  32. 32

Nevertrump

2016Hashtag / political movementdead

Also known as: NeverTrump · Never Trump · NeverTrump Movement

#NeverTrump is a 2016 Twitter hashtag and political movement uniting conservative Republicans against Donald Trump's presidential campaign after his Nevada primary victory.

#NeverTrump is a political hashtag that trended worldwide on Twitter on February 26, 2016, rallying conservative Republicans who refused to support Donald Trump's presidential bid. What started as an organic eruption of opposition after Trump's Nevada primary victory grew into an organized movement with its own super PAC, prominent media voices, and deep fractures within the Republican Party that lasted well beyond the 2016 election cycle.

TL;DR

#NeverTrump is a political hashtag that trended worldwide on Twitter on February 26, 2016, rallying conservative Republicans who refused to support Donald Trump's presidential bid.

Overview

#NeverTrump was a hashtag used by conservatives and Republicans who pledged to never vote for Donald Trump, even if he won the party's presidential nomination. The movement drew from several factions within the party: fiscal conservatives who objected to Trump's protectionist trade positions, social conservatives who questioned his sincerity on abortion and faith, national security hawks who rejected his isolationist foreign policy, and establishment Republicans who feared he would drag down candidates in congressional and state races.

The hashtag worked as both a political declaration and a rallying point for organizing. Users would tweet #NeverTrump alongside their personal reasons for opposition, creating a running public ledger of Republican dissent. The movement's ecosystem eventually included op-eds, super PACs, third-party candidate discussions, and eventually the Lincoln Project, an anti-Trump group that raised tens of millions of dollars during the 2020 election cycle.

Trump drew conservative criticism almost immediately after announcing his presidential candidacy in June 2015. Writers at the National Review made opposing Trump an editorial policy, with contributor Jonah Goldberg warning that Trump's supporters were "being conned and played". Mona Charen, also writing for the magazine, called Trump "a blowhard with all the nuance of a grenade". Early objections focused on Trump's departures from Republican orthodoxy: his past support for single-payer healthcare, his pro-choice history, his advocacy for an assault weapons ban, and his donations to Bill and Hillary Clinton's campaigns and foundation.

The crowded Republican primary field, which at one point exceeded seventeen candidates, divided traditional conservative voters and let Trump win early contests despite polls showing a majority of Republican voters would have preferred another nominee. Super Tuesday exit poll data from states like Arkansas and Virginia showed that more voters would have been satisfied with a Rubio or Cruz nomination than a Trump nomination, but the split field kept handing Trump victories.

On February 26, 2016, the hashtag #NeverTrump began trending worldwide on Twitter. The immediate trigger was Trump's commanding victory in the Nevada caucuses, compounded by New Jersey Governor Chris Christie's surprise endorsement. The hashtag caught fire across partisan lines. Presidential candidate Marco Rubio shared a link encouraging supporters to add their names to the cause, and conservative commentator Erick Erickson tweeted that he was "proud to play a role in getting #NeverTrump trending".

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter
Key People
Unknown, popularized by Ben Sasse, Erick Erickson
Date
2016
Year
2016

Trump drew conservative criticism almost immediately after announcing his presidential candidacy in June 2015. Writers at the National Review made opposing Trump an editorial policy, with contributor Jonah Goldberg warning that Trump's supporters were "being conned and played". Mona Charen, also writing for the magazine, called Trump "a blowhard with all the nuance of a grenade". Early objections focused on Trump's departures from Republican orthodoxy: his past support for single-payer healthcare, his pro-choice history, his advocacy for an assault weapons ban, and his donations to Bill and Hillary Clinton's campaigns and foundation.

The crowded Republican primary field, which at one point exceeded seventeen candidates, divided traditional conservative voters and let Trump win early contests despite polls showing a majority of Republican voters would have preferred another nominee. Super Tuesday exit poll data from states like Arkansas and Virginia showed that more voters would have been satisfied with a Rubio or Cruz nomination than a Trump nomination, but the split field kept handing Trump victories.

On February 26, 2016, the hashtag #NeverTrump began trending worldwide on Twitter. The immediate trigger was Trump's commanding victory in the Nevada caucuses, compounded by New Jersey Governor Chris Christie's surprise endorsement. The hashtag caught fire across partisan lines. Presidential candidate Marco Rubio shared a link encouraging supporters to add their names to the cause, and conservative commentator Erick Erickson tweeted that he was "proud to play a role in getting #NeverTrump trending".

How It Spread

The hashtag's overnight success turned "NeverTrump" into a collective label for anti-Trump conservatives. Major outlets including the Washington Post, Fox News, and the New York Times began using it as shorthand for right-of-center opposition to Trump's candidacy.

In early March 2016, a group of grassroots activists launched the #NeverTrump PAC, a super PAC dedicated to blocking Trump from the nomination. The organization outlined a three-pronged strategy: social media campaigns, grassroots mobilization, and working the Republican delegate process to deny Trump the 1,237 delegates needed for a first-ballot victory at the convention. Pierre Omidyar, the founder of eBay, later donated $100,000 to the PAC.

After Trump's strong Super Tuesday showing on March 1, anti-Trump groups moved to attack him with millions in television ads in Florida, which held its primary on March 15. Three groups reserved $5 million of airtime in the state, with Our Principles PAC releasing a web ad titled "Unelectable" that previewed how Democrats would use Trump's own statements against him. The PAC raised more than $8.4 million in March, expanding from just three donors in January to over fifty.

Conservative media figures staked out public positions. Ben Shapiro of the Daily Wire declared he would never vote for Trump, framing it as a defense of conservatism's future: "If Trump wins, he guts the only movement we have. If Hillary wins, there may be a future for our movement yet". Glenn Beck said he would refuse to vote for any ticket that included Trump, even with Ted Cruz at the top. Mark Levin, who had initially criticized NeverTrumpers, reversed course in April 2016 and declared himself officially #NeverTrump after Trump ally Roger Stone published what Levin considered a smear piece against him.

FiveThirtyEight's coverage drew a useful distinction between two strands of opposition. "#StopTrump" referred to efforts focused on denying Trump the nomination through the delegate process, while "#NeverTrump" described a harder line: refusing to vote for Trump under any circumstances, even as the nominee. Some outlets used the terms interchangeably, though the distinction mattered to movement participants.

By late April 2016, The Hill published a partial list of prominent Republicans in the #NeverTrump camp, including 2012 nominee Mitt Romney, Senator Ben Sasse, Governor Charlie Baker, and several sitting House members. Concerns about down-ballot damage were widespread. Arizona Senator Jeff Flake said he viewed the likely Trump nomination "with concern and dread," and exit polling in swing states showed roughly 40% of non-Trump Republican voters were reluctant to turn out for him in November.

How to Use This Meme

#NeverTrump is a declaration, not a meme template. People typically use it by:

1

Tweeting the hashtag alongside a personal statement explaining their opposition to Trump

2

Sharing articles, polls, or Trump quotes that reinforce the case against him

3

Adding #NeverTrump to profile bios or display names as a permanent stance marker

4

Signing online petitions or pledges not to vote for Trump, which groups like the #NeverTrump PAC used to build contact lists

Cultural Impact

The #NeverTrump movement marked a rare moment of organized, public rebellion within a major American political party during a presidential primary. It generated heavy coverage from outlets across the political spectrum, with the Washington Post, New York Times, Fox News, CNN, and NPR all dedicating substantial reporting to the movement's trajectory.

The movement's failure to stop Trump's nomination, and his subsequent general election victory, reshaped how political commentators discuss intra-party opposition. The Cook Political Report's pre-election analysis noted Trump's "historic unpopularity with wide swaths of the electorate," including women, millennials, independents, and Latinos, but those weaknesses weren't enough to prevent his win.

The Lincoln Project, a direct outgrowth of the 2016 movement, produced viral attack ads targeting Trump and Republican senators like Lindsey Graham in the 2020 cycle. The group's ad portraying Graham as a "parasite" feeding off Trump drew significant attention but also criticism from the right. 60 Minutes aired a segment on the Lincoln Project, and the New Yorker published a 7,300-word profile of the organization.

Erick Erickson's push for a third-party alternative in 2016 foreshadowed ongoing debates about whether the Republican Party could sustain a coalition that included both Trump's populist base and traditional fiscal and social conservatives. The movement also exposed the gap between Republican voters and the party's donor and commentator class, a dynamic that Jindal acknowledged when he wrote that "we have failed to convince or demonstrate the wisdom of our conservative policies to the voters, and we are thus partially responsible for the rise of Trump".

Full History

The #NeverTrump movement reached its crisis point on May 3, 2016, when Ted Cruz dropped out of the Republican primary after losing Indiana. RNC Chairman Reince Priebus declared Trump the presumptive nominee and called on Republicans to "unite and focus on defeating" Hillary Clinton. For many in the movement, this was exactly the scenario they had dreaded, and reactions split along predictable lines.

Some Republicans capitulated. Former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee went "all in" for Trump, dismissing the "#NeverTrump nonsense" and telling holdouts: "This isn't Burger King. You don't get it all the time just like you want it". Bobby Jindal, who had once mocked Trump in some of the harshest language of any primary candidate, endorsed him while calling it the "second-worst" option available. Jindal's op-ed was notable for its blunt framing: "I am not pretending that Mr. Trump has suddenly become a conservative champion or even a reliable Republican. He is completely unpredictable".

Others dug in harder. Erick Erickson called for a third-party candidate to give disenchanted Republicans a reason to show up at the polls and protect down-ballot races. In an NPR interview, Erickson argued that roughly 40% of Republican voters would refuse to support Trump, and without an alternative on the ballot, congressional and state legislative races would suffer catastrophic losses. Over at the Washington Free Beacon, journalist Lachlan Markay burned his Republican voter registration on camera. Former John McCain staffer Mark Salter and RedState blogger Ben Howe declared grudging support for Hillary Clinton.

Weekly Standard editor Bill Kristol emerged as the most visible organizer for a third-party alternative. In early May, he met privately with Mitt Romney at the J.W. Marriott hotel in Washington to discuss an independent presidential bid. "He came pretty close to being elected president so I thought he may consider doing it," Kristol told reporters, adding that he also wanted Romney's endorsement for any alternative candidate that might emerge. Kristol had also courted retired Marines Corps General James Mattis, who declined to run. At a public event afterward, Romney told attendees: "I am dismayed at where we are now. I wish we had better choices".

The electoral math painted a grim picture for Trump at the time. A CNN/ORC poll completed before Trump's Indiana victory showed Clinton leading 54% to 41%, her largest margin since July 2015. Both candidates were historically unpopular, with 56% of voters viewing Trump unfavorably, and most supporters of each candidate saying their preference was driven more by opposition to the other side than genuine enthusiasm. The Cook Political Report shifted ratings in 13 states toward Democrats, placing enough electoral votes in the "Lean Democratic" column for a Clinton majority before the general election campaign even began.

The movement's organized wing struggled with money after Indiana. Anti-Trump groups had spent $2.8 million in the state, plus an additional $3.3 million backing Cruz, yet Trump won decisively. Rob Stutzman, a California strategist organizing stop-Trump efforts, admitted that "Indiana will influence our fundraising" even before the results came in. California's June 7 primary, with its 172 delegates, was supposed to be the movement's backstop, but Trump needed fewer than 200 additional delegates to clinch, making the math nearly impossible.

Within the movement, a counter-hashtag emerged. #NeverHillary was adopted by conservatives who, while unhappy with Trump, viewed Clinton as the greater threat. Fox News commentator John Gibson urged NeverTrumpers to "come to your senses," arguing that stopping Clinton should take priority over internal Republican disputes. Jindal's CNN opinion piece acknowledged that the Republican establishment bore some blame for Trump's rise, arguing that the party "failed to convince or demonstrate the wisdom of our conservative policies to the voters".

The NeverTrump identity persisted well beyond 2016. By 2020, the Lincoln Project, founded by Republican operatives including Rick Wilson and Steve Schmidt, was spending tens of millions on anti-Trump advertising. Bill Kristol's Defending Democracy Together organization, funded in part by Pierre Omidyar, operated several anti-Trump outlets including The Bulwark and Republican Voters Against Trump. Critics on the right dismissed these groups as grift operations, noting that most of the Lincoln Project's nearly $40 million in third-quarter 2020 fundraising came from left-wing donors rather than disaffected Republicans. Trump won the 2016 election despite the movement's efforts, and the term "NeverTrumper" became a fixture of American political vocabulary, used as a pejorative by Trump supporters and as a badge of principle by holdouts.

Fun Facts

Marco Rubio, while still an active presidential candidate, shared a #NeverTrump sign-up link on Twitter, making him the only sitting GOP candidate to openly promote the hashtag.

When asked whether someone other than Trump could still be nominated at the July convention, RNC Chairman Reince Priebus told reporters: "Nothing's impossible," before quickly adding it was "highly, highly doubtful".

Polls taken during Super Tuesday showed that in Arkansas, 56% of Republican voters would have been satisfied with either a Cruz or Rubio nomination, but only 47% were okay with Trump as the nominee, yet Trump still won the state.

Ben Shapiro compared backing Trump to the "organ donor ethical problem," asking whether it's moral to kill one healthy doctor to harvest organs for five dying patients: "The pro-Trump answer: kill conservatism to save the country".

Indiana, where Cruz made his last stand, had both the highest share of evangelical Protestants of any remaining state and the highest share of manufacturing jobs in the country, making it a uniquely split battleground between Cruz's and Trump's bases.

Derivatives & Variations

#NeverHillary / #NeverClinton

Counter-hashtags used by conservatives who argued that preventing a Clinton presidency was more important than opposing Trump[24].

#StopTrump

A related but distinct effort focused on denying Trump the nomination through the delegate process, rather than pledging to never vote for him[9].

#WeCanDoBetter

Senator Ben Sasse's alternative hashtag criticizing both parties' nominees[4].

The Lincoln Project

An anti-Trump PAC founded in 2019 by former Republican operatives, widely seen as the institutional successor to the NeverTrump movement, raising nearly $40 million in Q3 2020 alone[17].

Republican Voters Against Trump

A project under Bill Kristol's Defending Democracy Together umbrella that ran swing-state ads featuring self-described lifelong Republicans planning to vote for Joe Biden in 2020[17].

#NeverTrump PAC

A grassroots super PAC formed in March 2016 specifically named after the hashtag, focused on social media campaigns and delegate strategy[2].

Frequently Asked Questions

References (32)

  1. 1
  2. 2
  3. 3
  4. 4
  5. 5
    $Trumpencyclopedia
  6. 6
  7. 7
  8. 8
  9. 9
  10. 10
  11. 11
  12. 12
  13. 13
  14. 14
  15. 15
  16. 16
  17. 17
  18. 18
  19. 19
  20. 20
  21. 21
  22. 22
  23. 23
  24. 24
  25. 25
  26. 26
  27. 27
  28. 28
  29. 29
  30. 30
  31. 31
  32. 32