With just under 100 days until
Election Day, tensions between
Donald Trump and the Republican
Party have reached a boiling point in
the wake of his feud with the parents
of slain Muslim American soldier
Humayun Khan.
Republican strategists and former
elected officials are deeply perplexed
by their nominee's self-destructive
impulses, his penchant for courting
controversy and his move to further
inflame intra-party chaos this week
by refusing to endorse House Speaker
Paul Ryan or Arizona Senator John
McCain for reelection.
Some Republicans have given up on
their dreams of a post-primary
"pivot," and are ready to concede the
White House and instead focus
resources on saving their Senate
majority as well as candidates down
the ballot.
Trump is "facing an electoral wipeout
at this point. I think getting him to
change his behavior is a fool's
errand," said Matt Mackowiak, a
Texas-based Republican strategist.
"He's now doing intentional damage
to the party. He's hurting our
candidates. It's clear he doesn't care
about the Republican Party, so what
responsibility does the Republican
Party have to him at this point?"
It has been a rough week for Trump.
Polls show that the Democratic
convention erased Trump's lead after
the Republican convention and gave
Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton
back her advantage. He's alienated
prominent Republicans, such as
former congressman Vin Weber, who
told CNBC's John Harwood he'll
probably leave the party if Trump
wins. The Trump-Khan spat was the
final straw for several GOP figures
who came out for Clinton—including
former California gubernatorial
nominee Meg Whitman, former Jeb
Bush adviser Sally Bradshaw, former
Chris Christie adviser Maria Comella
and retiring U.S. Representative
Richard Hanna.
"It's a stupid fight to pick," said Tom
Davis, a Republican former
congressman from Virginia, who said
he isn't ready to get behind Trump's
campaign. "The rhetoric he used was
bad," he said, adding that Trump was
hurting himself by "not running a
disciplined campaign."
"I wince some nights when I watch
Trump just blowing opportunities to
score points and going on defense
when he ought to be on offense,"
Davis said. "It's just not the kind of
campaign you'd be enthused about."
In a further sign of discord, Trump
running mate Mike Pence on
Wednesday endorsed Ryan, even as
the presidential nominee refused.
Reports swirled that Republican
National Committee Chair Reince
Priebus, a fellow Wisconsinite who is
close to Ryan, was livid about
Trump's snub.
Meanwhile, Trump campaign
chairman Paul Manafort went on Fox
News on Wednesday and dismissed
reports about internal chaos among
Trump aides, which has
overshadowed what the Trump
campaign says was a remarkable $80
million fundraising haul in July. "The
turmoil—this is another Clinton
narrative that is put out there and
the media is picking up on," he said,
arguing that "the campaign is in very
good shape—we are organized, we
are moving forward."
Trump senior adviser Kellyanne
Conway rejected notions of Trump
dropping out of the race as "wishful
thinking."
But the reports of a campaign in
disarray have pro-Trump
Republicans worried.
"I'm mostly concerned with the
rumors coming out that Manafort has
no operational control and that
Trump is winging it. If they're not a
campaign at the top this could be
really bad for Republicans all the
way down the ticket," said John
Feehery, a Republican strategist and
lobbyist. "All this other stuff is kind
of typical—his blather and his
inability to restrain his emotions. I
don't see mass defections from his
voters on this."
Still, Trump's rough stretch doesn't
mean GOP politicians will reject him,
at least for the foreseeable future.
His command of an energized
plurality of the party base during the
primaries means Republicans up and
down the ballot this fall will rely on
his voters to win their races.
"If you're an elected official you have
to appeal to them somehow. Just
walking away from Trump is
political suicide," Feehery said. "In
most Republican districts, Trump is
very popular. And all this politically
incorrect stuff is very popular with
the Republican base... You can't diss
the Donald Trump voter."
Trump rallied his base Wednesday at
a campaign stop in Daytona Beach,
Florida by labeling the U.S. a "third
world nation" and taking aim at
President Barack Obama and Clinton.
"We've got to stop being the stupid
country run by very stupid people,"
he said. "She'll be worse than Obama.
Believe me."
In a sign that Trump's refusal to
endorse Ryan or McCain is about
settling personal scores, the nominee
encouraged his Florida crowd to vote
for former 2016 rival Marco Rubio's
reelection bid to the Senate. "I
endorsed Marco Rubio, he endorsed
me. He's doing well. Go for Marco,"
Trump said. Unlike Ryan or McCain,
who released statements rebuking
Trump's remarks on Sunday
insulting the parents of Capt. Khan,
Rubio largely steered clear of the
controversy.
Trump's actions in recent days have
earned an admonishment from Newt
Gingrich, the former House speaker
and one of his most loyal supporters.
Wednesday on Fox News, Gingrich
said Trump must "slow down, take a
deep breath, and reorganize how
he's operating so he gets to the
standard of the potential president of
the United States."
"He has not done that up till now. It's
been significantly to his
disadvantage," Gingrich said. "So I
think some of what Trump has done
is very self-destructive... I don’t know
if it's a fixable problem but I think
it’s a very big moment for Trump. He
has got to find a way to slow down,
really learn some new lessons. This is
like The Apprentice except he’s the
apprentice and not the boss, he
doesn’t get to say 'you're fired.' The
American people get to say 'you’re
fired.'"
Wednesday, 3 August 2016
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