Toronto Star

Republican­s fear party’s undoing

Members increasing­ly ready to concede White House as Trump risks self-destructio­n

- SAHIL KAPUR BLOOMBERG

WASHINGTON— With just under 100 days until the presidenti­al election, 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 intraparty chaos this week by refusing to endorse House Speaker Paul Ryan or Arizona Sen. John McCain for re-election.

Some Republican­s have given up on their dreams of a post-primary “pivot” and are ready to concede the White House and focus resources on saving their Senate majority, as well as candidates down the ballot.

Trump, 70, is “facing an electoral wipeout at this point. I think getting him to change his behaviour 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 national convention erased his lead after the Republican gathering and gave Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton back her advantage.

He’s alienated prominent Republican­s such as former representa­tive 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 representa­tive Richard Hanna of New York.

“It’s a stupid fight to pick,” said Tom Davis, a Republican former representa­tive 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.”

In a further sign of discord, Trump’s running mate, Mike Pence, on Wednesday endorsed Ryan for reelection in Wisconsin, even as the presidenti­al nominee refused. News swirled that Republican National Committee chair Reince Priebus, a fellow Wisconsini­te who is close to Ryan, was livid about Trump’s snub.

“There’s a conflict within the Trump campaign,” top Trump aide Paul Manafort acknowledg­ed Thursday on ABC News.

Manafort’s comment came a day after he went on Fox News and dismissed reports about internal chaos among Trump aides, which has overshadow­ed what the Trump cam- paign says was a remarkable $80million 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 reports of a campaign in disarray have pro-Trump Republican­s worried.

“I’m mostly concerned with the rumours 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.

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, Fla., by labelling the U.S. a “thirdworld nation” and taking aim at Clinton and President Barack Obama. “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 re-election 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, a 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 ’til 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.’ ”

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Republican strategist­s and former elected officials are perplexed by Donald Trump’s penchant for controvers­y and his move to inflame intraparty chaos.
EVAN VUCCI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Republican strategist­s and former elected officials are perplexed by Donald Trump’s penchant for controvers­y and his move to inflame intraparty chaos.

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