As far as I know, no, what you are asking for is not possible. You basically have three options:
You can change your user name so it can no longer be associated with any of your other online identities. Nothing else will change, but you can do this by yourself and still retain full control over your content.
You can ask that a moderator or the team place a temporary suspension on your account so that you will no longer be able to participate on Stack Overflow. Your account will remain intact, and your activity will continue to be associated with your account, but your reputation will drop to 1 for the duration and you won't be able to do anything until the suspension expires. We've had people who claimed to be chronically addicted to Stack Overflow ask for their account to be suspended, and as far as I can remember, their request was obliged.
You can contact the team and ask that all of your contributions (or any individual contributions) be dissociated from your account. This is probably the closest to what you're asking for, since your name will no longer be associated with any of your posts—they'll just have an anonymized "userXXXXXX" name attached to them. The problem with this is that it is permanent. You can return to Stack Overflow any time you want, but you will not be able to regain ownership of your dissociated content.
Obviously, if you wish to take such a stand, it is entirely your right and you should feel free to do so.
However, if I may be allowed to editorialize a bit, I would urge you to reconsider. Joel Spolsky and other members of the Stack Overflow team may have an obvious political bias, and they may choose to share that message on their website. That is not the same as "enforcing a political orthodoxy". You are allowed to disagree, and it would be absurd if anyone took the opinions of the company to be a representation of the opinions of all its users.
I have a notebook made by a little company in Cupertino that occasionally takes political stances, but that doesn't imply that I agree with every action taken by Tim Cook and company. As another example, I recently bought shoes from a US company called Greats. Their CEO recently sent out an overtly political message as an email to all of their customers, and cross-posted it to their blog. Now, I happen to strongly agree with this message, but even in a world where I didn't, I wouldn't refuse to wear the shoes or send them back. Would you? How is this different? Companies have a distinct identity from their users/consumers.