The Independent

Trump’s run at presidency panned by former loyalists

Ex-chief of staff says he is the only Republican candidate who could lose to Joe Biden in 2024,

- reports Andrew Feinberg

Trump-era officials were among a slew of high-profile Republican­s criticisin­g the former president’s announceme­nt of a third bid for the White House in 2024. Donald Trump launched his campaign with a rambling, grievance-laden address to supporters at his Mar-a-Lago estate, where just three months ago FBI agents executed a search warrant looking for evidence

that he’d violated US laws in retaining national defence informatio­n and the obstructio­n of justice.

The twice-impeached former president, who fomented a riot in a last-ditch attempt to keep himself in power after he lost to Joe Biden in 2020, threw his hat into the ring just a week after most of his preferred candidates had failed to win their respective contests in the 2022 midterm elections. Many in his own party placed the blame on Mr Trump for a weaker-than-expected showing for the GOP.

His former chief of staff, ex-South Carolina congressma­n Mick Mulvaney, told CNN on Tuesday that he doesn’t think Mr Trump’s decision to run is good for the party. “I think he’s the only Republican who could lose,” said Mr Mulvaney, who resigned his position as Mr Trump’s envoy for Northern Ireland after the January 6 attack on the Capitol.

He added that Mr Trump’s chances of becoming the GOP nominee against Mr Biden two years from now could be helped by the way Republican­s allocate delegates for their four-yearly nominating convention. “Can he be beaten head-to-head by Ron DeSantis or Tim Scott? Sure, but it’s not going to be a head-tohead race,” he said. “There will be five or six other people in the race, and he’ll get the 35 per cent that really support him, and under the winner-take-all primary system, he’ll be the nominee.”

The man who was Mr Trump’s running mate in 2020 and 2016, former vice-president Mike Pence, also weighed in during an interview to promote his new book, So Help Me God. Mr Pence criticised Mr Trump’s decision, telling an interviewe­r on Tuesday: “I think we’ll have better choices.” He is widely expected to mount his own campaign for the GOP nomination in the near future.

The 2012 Republican nominee for president, Utah senator Mitt Romney, was just as blunt, telling reporters yesterday: “We need a leader who’s younger and has a bright vision for the future.” “President Trump has lost three in a row, and if we want to start winning we need new leaders,” said Mr Romney, who is the only

GOP senator to have voted to convict Mr Trump at both of his impeachmen­t trials.

His colleague Lisa Murkowski expressed similar sentiments, noting that she is “a bit weary of campaigns” at this point. Asked whether Mr Trump’s announceme­nt helps the Republican­s’ chances of picking up the Georgia senate seat held by senator Raphael Warnock, Ms Murkowski replied: “I don’t believe so.”

Meanwhile, influentia­l GOP mega-donor Stephen Schwarzman, the CEO of Blackstone, has announced that he will not support Mr Trump for the 2024 Republican nomination. He said that it was “time for the Republican Party to turn to a new generation of leaders” and that he intended to offer his support to an alternativ­e candidate in the presidenti­al primaries.

The announceme­nt by Mr Schwarzman means that whichever Republican emerges as Mr Trump’s biggest rival in 2024 will have at least some financial backing from the party’s establishm­ent. Currently, that person looks to be Florida’s Ron DeSantis, thanks to an onslaught of polls depicting him as the only Republican with a mathematic­al shot of beating Mr Trump in a theoretica­l primary.

But much could change in the next two years – including, potentiall­y, Mr DeSantis ruling himself out as a candidate – and as a result, several other GOP hopefuls have emerged as likely candidates for the nomination. Among the other Republican­s thought to be plotting 2024 bids include former secretary of state Mike Pompeo, Missouri senator Josh Hawley, former UN ambassador Nikki Haley, and congresswo­man Liz Cheney.

Mr Trump’s own daughter and former White House adviser, Ivanka Trump, released a statement on Tuesday explaining that she was stepping away from politics and would not be a part of her father’s future campaign or potential administra­tion.

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 ?? (Reuters) ?? Donald Trump arrives with his wife Melania at an event to announce his candidacy
(Reuters) Donald Trump arrives with his wife Melania at an event to announce his candidacy
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