Chattanooga Times Free Press

Trump lashes out at his GOP critics

- BY SEEMA MEHTA

Reed Galen was about to go to sleep one night last week when his phone pinged. President Donald Trump was tweeting about him and his group of longtime Republican allies who are working to make sure Trump is not reelected.

The group, a political action committee called the Lincoln Project, had created an ad called “Mourning in America,” a play on a famed 1984 Ronald Reagan campaign ad. The one-minute video blasts Trump’s handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic and the economic free-fall, arguing he has made the country “weaker and sicker and poorer.”

It was mostly a digital effort, but they spent a few thousand dollars to air the ad on Fox News during Tucker Carlson’s nightly show on Monday. The purchase — aimed at an audience of one — clearly hit its mark.

“A group of RINO Republican­s who failed badly 12 years ago, then again 8 years ago, and then got BADLY beaten by me, a political first timer, 4 years ago, have copied (no imaginatio­n) the concept of an ad from Ronald Reagan, “Morning in America”, doing everything possible to … get even for all of their many failures,” Trump wrote in a firestorm of tweets after midnight last Monday. “I didn’t use any of them … because they don’t know to win, and their so-called Lincoln Project is a disgrace to Honest Abe.”

Galen, a former Orange County-based GOP strategist who now lives in Park City, Utah, described the moment as “surreal.”

“It’s one of these things where you work hard, and you have an idea, and sometimes it all comes to fruition,” he said. “I would be lying if I said it does not seem surreal to be sitting in bed and watching the president of the United States trash you and your friends and spell your name wrong.”

It was the most attention the Lincoln Project had received. The political action committee was formed by a small group of Republican strategist­s with ties to politician­s such as former President George W. Bush, former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger, and the late Arizona Sen. John McCain. They have endorsed Democrat Joe Biden for president.

They had a relatively small budget and are largely unknown by the general public, though their antiTrump efforts have garnered some headlines.

Trump’s tweets launched them into a new stratosphe­re. Their videos typically receive several hundred thousand views; “Mourning in America” has been watched by more than 16 million people.

 ?? AP PHOTO/EVAN VUCCI ?? President Donald Trump listens during a meeting about the coronaviru­s response Tuesday in the Oval Office.
AP PHOTO/EVAN VUCCI President Donald Trump listens during a meeting about the coronaviru­s response Tuesday in the Oval Office.

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