Gov. Larry Hogan attends a meeting of the National Governors Association at the White House. (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

Gov. Larry Hogan attends a meeting of the National Governors Association at the White House in February. (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

After dodging questions for weeks, the Republican governor of Maryland says he won’t be casting a vote for Donald Trump.

“No, I don’t plan to,” Hogan told The Washington Post, when asked if he’d vote for his party’s nominee. “I guess when I get behind the curtain I’ll have to figure it out. Maybe write someone in. I’m not sure.”

Trump won Maryland’s April 26 primary with 54 percent of the vote (Kasich trundled behind with 20 percent and Cruz followed with 19 percent).

Hogan endorsed New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, a friend, back when that was a thing. Since then, Hogan has said he’s “no fan” of Trump and that he wouldn’t endorse any candidate, even as other GOPers, including Christie, have endorsed the presumptive Republican nominee.

As reporters kept asking questions, he’s gotten increasingly frustrated. From the Baltimore Sun:

After Trump declared himself the party’s presumptive nominee on April 26, the night he won Maryland’s primary and several others, Hogan walked away from a podium rather than answer a question about supporting the politician Republican voters in his state selected.

Later that same week, he answered a question about whether his position had changed now that the primary was over. “I said I was not going to get involved and I would not endorse any candidate, and that I was going to stay focused on Maryland.

“I get asked that almost every day, but I’ve been saying the same thing … I’m not going to take any more stupid questions about Donald Trump. It’s not what I focus on every day.”

But with today’s comments, he joins a small cadre of Republican politicians who have fully rebuked Trump.