Some prominent Republican figures across the country stepped out for Super Tuesday to vote blue.
Among them was John Weaver, a political consultant who worked on John McCain's presidential campaign in 2000 and 2008 and served as the chief strategist for Ohio Gov. John Kashich's GOP run for the White House in 2016.
MORE: Super Tuesday live updates: Voters in 14 states and 1 US territory head to the pollsWeaver announced on Twitter that he had voted for former Vice President Joe Biden in Texas.
"Just voted to return decency to the White House and beat the hell outta [President Donald Trump]," Weaver wrote, along with an image of his "I Voted" sticker.
Bruce Bartlett, who served as a senior policy analyst in the Reagan White House and at the Treasury Department during the George H.W. Bush administration, also announced his decision to vote Democrat for Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass.
"I voted for Elizabeth Warren in Virginia today because I believe she would make the best president among those running for the Democratic nomination," Bartlett said.
Matt Lewis, a political commentator for CNN who described himself as a "conservative Republican" in Virginia, explained his decision to vote for Biden on Twitter and in a column in The Daily Beast titled "This Virginia Conservative Republican is Ridin' with Biden."
"Biden is the most conservative candidate -- who can win," Lewis said. "I am also voting to stop a socialist. The last thing this country needs is a binary choice between Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump!!"
George Conway, the husband of Kellyanne Conway, counselor to Trump, similarly pledged his support to Biden on Super Tuesday.
Conway posted a screenshot of a contribution he made to the Biden campaign: a one-time contribution of $2,800. Conway has targeted Trump regularly on Twitter, but was a longtime Republican until changing to an Independent in 2018.
Voters in 14 states and the territory of American Samoa are heading to the polls for what is the single biggest day of voting in the primaries. There are 1,344 delegates up for grabs.