YOUNGSTOWN, OH - JULY 30:  Democratic presidential nominee former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and democratic vice presidential nominee U.S. Sen Tim Kaine (D-VA) fist bump during a campaign rally at East High School on July 30, 2016 in Youngstown, Pennsylvania. Hillary Clinton and Tim Kaine are continuing their three-day bus tour through Pennsylvania and Ohio.  (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
Clinton and Kaine target Trump's base on bus tour
02:36 - Source: CNN

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The Houston Chronicle's editorial board said supporting Donald Trump would repudiate 'notions of competence'

The paper has traditionally endorsed Republican candidates, supporting Mitt Romney in 2012

CNN  — 

Hillary Clinton has earned an early surprise endorsement from The Houston Chronicle with the Texas newspaper describing Donald Trump as “totally lacking in qualifications to be president.”

With 99 days to go until Election Day, November 8, The Chronicle’s editorial board announced its support of Clinton on Friday in a scathing review of Trump’s candidacy, criticizing his policy positions on immigration, healthcare, energy and foreign affairs, as well as his experience and temperament.

The board wrote that while it usually endorsed candidates closer to Election Day, it made an exception for the 2016 presidential race because the choice between Clinton and Trump was not merely political and to stand behind the Republican nominee would “repudiate the most basic notions of competence and capability.”

“Any one of Trump’s less-than-sterling qualities – his erratic temperament, his dodgy business practices, his racism, his Putin-like strongman inclinations and faux-populist demagoguery, his contempt for the rule of law, his ignorance – is enough to be disqualifying,” the board wrote. “His convention-speech comment, ‘I alone can fix it,’ should make every American shudder. He is, we believe, a danger to the Republic.”

The Chronicle endorsed Jeb Bush during the Republican primaries and has traditionally supported GOP presidential candidates, backing Mitt Romney in 2012.

The last two Democratic nominees endorsed by the newspaper were Barack Obama in 2008 and Lyndon Johnson in 1964.

“These are unsettling times, even if they’re not the dark, dystopian end times that Trump lays out,” the board wrote. “They require a steady hand. That’s not Donald Trump.”