Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson said Sunday that he would not support a run by former President Donald Trump for reelection in 2024.
"He's got a good family ... and they love America," the Republican told host Dana Bash on CNN's "State of the Union." "But I would not support him for reelection in 2024."
"He's going to have a voice, as former presidents do, but there's many voices in our party," he went on. Trump "should not define our future."
Hutchinson said in January that he wanted the Trump administration to end, but stopped short of calling for the former president's resignation. He also called a second set of impeachment proceedings "unworkable."
The governor's nephew, an Arkansas state senator, has since announced he is leaving the Republican Party due to the direction the party has taken.
Hutchinson called on the GOP to pivot away from Trump's perspective and toward "a different voice for the future of our party."
"He will only define our party if we let him define our party," Hutchinson said Sunday. "I think it's fine for CPAC to invite former President Trump to speak, but how about the other voices? Senator [Bill] Cassidy from Louisana, those that have different points of view."
"That's what we've got to embrace," he went on. Trump "has a loud megaphone, but we have to have many different voices and in my view we can't let him define us for the future because that would just further divide our country and it would hurt our Republican Party."
Former Texas Rep. Will Hurd, a Republican who retired at the end of 2020, echoed Hutchinson's sentiments on NBC's "Meet the Press."
"This is a president that lost the House, the Senate, the White House in four years," Hurd said. "I think the last person to do that was Herbert Hoover and that was in the, in the Great Depression. And, you know, when you look at in the 2020 election, the number of Republicans that were successful significantly outperformed President Trump."
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