Republicans doubt Trump’s appeal after US mid-term elections

The Republican Party was supposed to sweep the United States midterm elections Y that former President Donald Trump would ride triumphantly toward the Republican nomination as he prepares to run again for the nation’s presidency.

Instead, the disappointing results for the Republican Party in Tuesday’s election are raising new questions about Trump’s appeal and the future of a party that has fully supported him. In addition, the elections have given a new impetus to the former president’s main rival.

Indeed, some allies were calling on Trump to delay his planned announcement for next week, noting that all of the party’s attention should be on Georgia, where former football player Herschel Walker’s bid to unseat Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock is headed. to a second round that could determine who retains control of the Senate. Walker has Trump’s backing.

I will advise you to postpone your announcement until after the Georgia runoff.said former Trump adviser Jason Miller, who spent the night with the former president at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida. “Georgia has to be the focus of every Republican in the country right now,” he noted.

Trump wanted to use the midterms as an opportunity to show he still has political clout after losing the 2020 presidential election. He endorsed more than 330 candidates in all races, often pushing inexperienced and highly flawed candidates.

He enjoyed his victories in the Republican primary, but many of his positions, such as repeat Trump’s lies about a stolen election and espousing hard-line views on abortion were out of step with the electorate.

Still, Trump scored several big wins on Tuesday, most notably in Ohio, where his Senate pick, JD Vance, author of “Hillibilly Elegy,” won. an easy win after Trump’s endorsement catapulted him to the front of a packed primary. In North Carolina, Rep. Ted Budd, one of Trump’s earliest endorsers, kept a Senate seat in GOP hands.

But Trump lost some of Tuesday’s biggest prizes, specifically in Pennsylvania, where Dr. Mehmet Oz, who narrowly won the primary for the Republican Senate nomination with Trump’s backing, lost to Democrat John Fetterman. Trump-endorsed candidates also lost their gubernatorial races in Pennsylvania, Michigan and Maryland, and one for the Senate in New Hampshire, though Trump seemed to celebrate the latter, attacking Republican Dan Bolduc for trying to moderate his positions by retracting his acceptance of Trump’s electoral lies.

If he had stood firm and honest, he would have won easily.”, Trump said on his social network. “Lessons learned!” he wrote.

Trump also celebrated the loss of Colorado Republican Senate candidate Joe O’Dea, who had said he believed it was time for the party to turn the page on Trump.

In other high-profile races in Arizona and Nevada, it was too early to declare a winner.

Arguably the biggest Republican win came in Florida, where Governor Ron DeSantis won re-election, cementing his status as a rising Republican star as he seeks his own 2024 presidential bid.

I just started to fight”, he commented to his supporters in his victory speech.

Although Republicans appear headed for control of the House of Representatives, and could ultimately take control of the Senate as well, those who believed frustrations over inflation, combined with President Joe Biden’s low approval ratings, would lead to quick and decisive victories, they blamed the former president for the results obtained. The message of the night, they argued: The American people want to turn the page.

“I mean, we had a historic opportunity, and the fact that Trump selected ineligible candidates has blown us away,” said Scott Reed, a veteran Republican strategist. “Trump has already lost three elections in a row for the Republican Party; It’s time to get out of this nonsense.”

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