
Trump faces red-state 'disaster' that could cement 'lame duck' status
President Donald Trump is facing one of the biggest tests of his grip on the GOP as he seeks revenge on red-state lawmakers, and according to a new Politico report, he is facing down the very real possibility of a "disaster" that would cement him as a "lame duck" president.Voters in Indiana are headed to the polls for a series of GOP primaries in state Senate elections this week. While these would ordinarily be quiet, uneventful races, they were injected with a heavy dose of chaos and uncertainty after Trump endorsed new candidates to try to primary eight of the Republican state senators who voted against the gerrymandered House map he demanded in the Hoosier State. It was an upset that threw a wrench into his plot to retain the GOP House majority by corrupt means, which Politico on Tuesday called the "most embarrassing political setback since he returned to the White House."As a result, roughly $10 million has poured into these primary races, pulling valuable resources from other competitive races to try and sate Trump's desire for revenge."Trump’s allies need to win a majority of the eight seats to be able to claim victory, if not sweep them," Politico explained. "Both sides would likely declare victory if they split the seats. If Trump’s side wins three seats or fewer, many will see it as a disaster and a red-state harbinger that Trump’s grip on his party is starting to slip as he heads toward lame-duck status."According to Indiana Republican strategist Mike O’Brien, Trump is risking a face-plant in this crusade due to the same sort of aggressive intervention that soured state lawmakers on his gerrymandering push.“In any other time, in any other place, where these DC guys come in with their own agenda, we tell them to go pound sand, and we’re Hoosiers, and we do our own thing, and we do it the right way, and we’re proud of it, and we should be,” O'Brien told Politico. ‘We’re just allowing these guys to come in and go, ‘you got it wrong,’ and believe it, and it pisses me off.”As Politico explained, "By almost any measure, Trump and his allies should romp Tuesday," given that "The full weight and fury of the MAGA political machine has whirred to life" to take down these eight state senators. Despite all that effort, however, "it’s not at all clear the effort will work," the outlet added, noting that Indiana's MAGA-friendly lieutenant governor has already set a low bar of three flipped seats as proof of victory, and that "few, if any, of the Trump-backed challengers have made redistricting itself a focal point of their messaging."Some are also hammering Trump and the GOP for the overt waste of electoral resources that the effort represents.It’s political malpractice to divert that money away from what should be the focus of electing Republicans,” state Sen. Spencer Deery, one of the Trump-targeted incumbents, told Politico. “Instead, not only is that money that’s coming from out of state not being used to elect Republicans in Congress, I and my colleagues are raising money at unprecedented rates in order to be able to compete — and that is money that also cannot be directed towards maintaining Congress."
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