Windsor Star

Attacks highlight concerns with Trump

- ERICA WERNER

WASHINGTON • Bob Corker, a two-term senator from Tennessee, is hardly the only Republican lambasting Donald Trump and raising dark concerns about harm the president might cause the U.S. and the world.

He’s just the only one who’s sounding off in public.

With his Twitter broadsides and explosive New York Times interview on Sunday, Corker gave voice to concerns about an unpredicta­ble president whose tendency to personaliz­e every issue creates risks for the nation.

In the interview in which he responded to a series of Twitter attacks on him by Trump, Corker said that the president was running the White House like it was “a reality show” and with bellicose threats that could set the nation “on the path to World War III.” He added that “every single day at the White House, it’s a situation of trying to contain him.”

Corker, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, is not seeking reelection and so his political fortunes are not dependent on Trump’s popularity.

Other Republican lawmakers remained silent Monday morning. The few Republican senators who did provide public views aligned themselves with Trump, not Corker.

Montana’s Steve Daines’ office said simply that the senator “has confidence in the president.”

Sen. John Barrasso disagrees with Corker, according to his office. Referring to Barrasso and Trump, the Wyoming senator’s office said, “On tax cuts, border security, and rebuilding American infrastruc­ture, they fight the same fight.”

Barrasso is among the establishm­ent Republican­s who face potential primary challenges from pro-Trump activists on the right.

The Associated Press sought to contact all 52 Republican senators on Monday for their response to Corker’s comments. With the Senate on recess this week and many offices closed for Columbus Day, the inquiries elicited few responses, and those who did largely declined to comment.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky didn’t directly answer when asked whether he shared Corker’s sentiments.

“Sen. Corker is a valuable member of the Senate Republican caucus and he’s also on the Budget Committee and a particular­ly important player as we move to the floor on the budget next week,” McConnell said.

His comments underscore­d what has frustrated Republican­s most about the Trump-Corker feud, which burst open Sunday when Trump began tweeting, inaccurate­ly, that Corker had begged for his endorsemen­t. Trump will need Corker if he is to get big tax changes through the Senate.

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