Chances are you don’t know the name Ruth Guerra, but this week she did something that many of her more famous fellow Republicans haven’t had the guts to do. She bailed on Donald Trump. For the past two years, Guerra was the head of Hispanic media relations for the Republican National Committee, taking the GOP’s talking points to Spanish-language TV networks. On Wednesday, it was revealed that she’d quit. According to The New York Times’s Jonathan Martin and Alexander Burns, Guerra made the move because “she was uncomfortable working for Mr. Trump.”

​Many Republicans, of course, are uncomfortable with Trump. It’s how they deal with that discomfort that separates them. Some just suck it up and fall in line, like Florida senator Marco Rubio. Only a few months ago, when he was running against Trump, Rubio called the businessman a “con artist,” “a lunatic,” and “wholly unprepared to be president.” Now Rubio says he’d be “honored” to speak on Trump’s behalf at the Republican Convention. When The Washington Examiner’s Philip Klein subsequently branded Rubio as “an opportunistic politician with his finger to the wind,” Rubio peevishly took to Twitter to brand Klein a “keyboard cowboy.”

Paul Ryan’s backbone wasn’t any stiffer. In early May, he made a big show of announcing that “I’m just not ready” to endorse Trump. After the two men met a week later, Ryan continued to withhold an endorsement. Just last week, Ryan reiterated that he still wasn’t ready to endorse Trump, telling reporters, “I haven’t made a decision…and nothing’s changed my perspective.” Since those most recent Ryan comments, Trump launched a grotesque racial attack against a federal judge; acted even more unhinged than usual at a press conference; and was faced with a barrage of new negative stories about the predatory-cum-fraudulent practices of his Trump University. So, of course, on Thursday Ryan announced that he was finally endorsing Trump.

​Other Republicans deal with their discomfort by telling themselves that they can change Trump. Like Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. He has endorsed his party’s presumptive presidential nominee, but this week he confessed that he’d “like to see a more thoughtful Trump” and told a story about a recent encounter he had with Trump at the NRA convention:

“We were in the green room. And I said, ‘Hey, Donald, are you going to use a script?’ And he took it out of his pocket. He said, ‘I hate scripts. You know, they’re boring.’ Yeah, they’re boring. The audience doesn’t like them. I said, ‘Put me down for boring. I’m in the boring caucus.' I think it’s important for you to lay out things with specificity which for anybody requires a script. I stayed behind and watched his speech. He did it his way for a while. Then he pulled a script out and read it, and it was boring, but he made the points he needed to make to that particular audience. So that’s what I’d like to see more of. I’d like to see a pivot in the direction of a more scripted candidate.”

McConnell drives a hard bargain.

​And then there is the dwindling band of #NeverTrump Republicans who deal with their discomfort by engaging in the fantasy that a candidate other than Hillary Clinton can save them and the Republic. This week, that fantasy scenario turned toward an obscure National Review writer (and Game of Thrones connoisseur) named David French, who Bill Kristol—having struck out with a host of more prominent prospects—is reportedly recruiting to run for the White House. The French candidacy is laughable for so many reasons—including the fact that French himself said earlier this year that he’d vote for Trump if he was the GOP nominee—but at least Kristol is trying.

​That’s more than you can say for Helen Aguirre Ferré. A conservative Miami radio and TV host who worked on Jeb Bush’s presidential campaign, Ferré has been a vocal critic of Trump, attacking him on Twitter for being sexist and anti-immigrant and encouraging violence. But this week, Ferré got a new job. She’s replacing Guerra as the RNC’s Hispanic Media Director.