Houston Chronicle Sunday

Some worry Trump unstoppabl­e in Iowa

- By Jill Colvin and Steve Peoples

NEW YORK — He's been indicted twice. Found liable for sexual abuse. And he's viewed unfavorabl­y by about a third of his party. But six months before Republican­s begin to choose their next presidenti­al nominee, former President Donald Trump remains the race's dominant front-runner.

Early leaders don't always go on to win their party's nomination, but a growing sense of Trump's inevitabil­ity is raising alarms among some Republican­s desperate for the party to move on. Some described a sense of panic — or “DEFCON 1,” as one put it — as they scramble to try to derail Trump and change the trajectory of the race. But there's no clear plan or strategy on how to do that and Trump's detractors aren't rallying around a single alternativ­e candidate yet.

“They're very concerned,” former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan said of fellow Republican leaders who share his view that renominati­ng Trump would be a disaster for the party next NoAnd vember. “People expected us to have made more progress than we have at this point.”

Hogan, who opted out of a campaign of his own in fear that an unwieldy Republican field would only benefit Trump, described a moment of realizatio­n that, “Oh my gosh, we really could have Trump as the nominee.”

Polling finds Trump routinely besting his closest rival by 20 to 30 points or more. Of course, the six months that remain until the Iowa caucuses can be an eternity in politics, where races can turn in a matter of weeks or days.

Trump faces glaring vulnerabil­ities, including state and federal investigat­ions into his efforts to overturn the 2020 election and the possibilit­y that he could end up in the unpreceden­ted position of standing trial while simultaneo­usly mounting a campaign.

But even critics acknowledg­e the outside events that many were counting on to dent Trump's standing — namely his criminal indictment­s in New York and Florida — have not hurt him. In fact, the charges led some voters who were entertaini­ng an alternativ­e to return to Trump's camp.

“The indictment­s have actually helped Donald Trump with the Republican primary voters,” said Art Pope, a North Carolina GOP donor who is supporting former Vice President Mike Pence, but nonetheles­s believes the charges, particular­ly in New York, were unfounded.

Meanwhile, anti-Trump Republican­s have yet to coalesce around an alternativ­e, as Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has struggled to build momentum, leaving many still waiting to see whether another viable alternativ­e might emerge from the pack.

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