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Trump Says He Will Now Invite Democrats to Governors’ Meeting
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By The New York Times
Published 1 hour ago on
February 12, 2026

President Donald Trump speaks an event where he received an “Undisputed Champion of Coal” award from an industry lobbying group, at the White House in Washington, on Wednesday, Feb. 11, 2026. Gov. Kevin Stitt of Oklahoma told Democratic governors on Wednesday that Trump had reversed course and would now invite them to an annual gathering of the nation’s governors, after the president had previously moved to exclude Democrats from the meeting. (Tierney L. Cross/The New York Times)

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WASHINGTON — Gov. Kevin Stitt of Oklahoma told Democratic governors on Wednesday that President Donald Trump had reversed course and would now invite them to an annual gathering of the nation’s governors at the White House, after the president had previously moved to exclude Democrats from the meeting.

Hours later, Trump repeatedly attacked Stitt, the chair of the National Governors Association, as a “RINO,” Republican in name only, apparently blaming the governor for the episode after The New York Times reported last week that the president had spurned Democrats from what had traditionally been a bipartisan working meeting with the president and Cabinet at the White House.

Stitt confirmed the reporting in a letter to governors on Friday and withdrew the NGA as the official organizer of the event, saying that it would not pay for transportation to the gathering and that the association sought to represent all governors.

Trump Denies Excluding Democrats

In a social media post, Trump denied that he had ever tried to exclude Democrats from the meeting — though by Tuesday night, only Republican governors had received invitations for the meeting scheduled for Friday. He did, however, confirm that he had personally blocked two Democrats, Govs. Wes Moore of Maryland and Jared Polis of Colorado, from a separate black-tie dinner that would take place after the meeting because he felt they were “not worthy of being there.”

In his statement, Trump said he had blocked Polis as part of his pressure campaign to release Tina Peters, a former Colorado county clerk who was convicted of tampering with voting machines after the 2020 election in a failed effort to prove Trump’s false claims that the election was stolen from him. Trump symbolically pardoned Peters last year, but the president has no legal power to pardon state crimes, leaving Polis as the only person with the power to pardon her.

“I look forward to seeing the Republican Governors,” Trump said in his post. “And some of the Democrats Governors who were worthy of being invited, but most of whom won’t show up.”

It is unclear how many Democratic governors, if any, would accept the late invitation to the Friday meeting.

Stitt, a conservative Republican who comfortably won reelection in deep-red Oklahoma, is in his last year as governor, as he is term-limited from running again. As the chair of the NGA and a departing incumbent governor, Stitt has sought to strike a balance between projecting loyalty to Trump and defending the authority of governors within their own states. Stitt had criticized Trump’s deployment of the National Guard in Chicago, saying that it violated “states’ rights.”

When Stitt informed governors of Trump’s plans to block Democrats from the meeting, he pleaded with members in his letter not to “allow one divisive action to achieve its goal of dividing us.”

“The solution is not to respond in kind, but to rise above and to remain focused on our shared duty to the people we serve,” he said.

Trump unleashed a broadside of attacks against Stitt on Wednesday for trying to strike that balance in the clash over the White House meeting, calling the Oklahoma governor “very mediocre (at best!)” and saying that “as usual with him, Stitt got it WRONG!”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

By Chris Cameron and Tyler Pager/Tierney L. Cross
c. 2026 The New York Times Company

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