Post-Tribune

Trump pulls in GOP endorsemen­ts

Backing in Congress builds as resistance to his run fades away

- By Lisa Mascaro and Jill Colvin

WASHINGTON — Long before Donald Trump announced his campaign to retake the White House, he launched a quieter campaign to rack up Republican endorsemen­ts.

In early 2021, after Trump lost to Democrat Joe Biden and inspired a mob of supporters to attack the Capitol trying to overturn the 2020 election, the defeated president started laying the groundwork for the support in Congress he would need for a return.

With lavish dinners hosted at his private clubs, telephone town-hall fundraiser­s, rides on his private jet and endorsemen­ts of his own up and down the ballot, Trump schmoozed and strategize­d and wined and dined his way to the GOP lawmakers’ support.

By the time of the first 2024 caucus in Iowa this month, Trump had secured endorsemen­ts from 120 House Republican­s and nearly half the Republican­s in the Senate. On Wednesday, after Trump won the New Hampshire primary, the number of endorsemen­ts climbed even higher, with a solid majority of Republican­s in both chambers of Congress.

“It’s past time for the Republican Party to unite around President Trump,” said Speaker Mike Johnson, setting the tone after Trump’s New Hampshire victory.

It’s a remarkable turnaround for Trump, whose campaign is being powered not only by loyal voters but also by elected Republican­s in Congress. And those lawmakers appear unwilling or unable to stop his rise, almost ensuring Trump has no institutio­nal roadblocks to the eventual party nomination and a potential return to power.

Trump himself marveled at those standing behind him on election night in New Hampshire, where he was trying to drive his remaining rival, Nikki Haley, out of the race with a show of endorsemen­ts from her home state of South Carolina. He singled out Sen. Tim Scott, suggesting he “must really hate” Haley, the state’s former governor.

The senator, once a Republican presidenti­al candidate himself, stepped up to correct Trump, gushing: “I just love you.”

The race for endorsemen­ts, years in the making, has been painstakin­gly orchestrat­ed as a way to bring a certain official Washington legitimacy to Trump, who was twice impeached by the House, including for the insurrecti­on at the Capitol. Trump now faces federal charges of defrauding voters in the run-up to the Capitol attack, among dozens of other charges in several court cases.

Once facing pockets of resistance in Congress, Trump has essentiall­y won over all segments of the Republican Party on Capitol Hill — the House GOP leadership team, including Whip Tom Emmer who had voted to certify Biden’s election, to the chairman of the hard-right House Freedom Caucus, Rep. Bob Good of Virginia, who quickly switched sides last week when Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis suspended his presidenti­al campaign.

The Republican­s in the Senate, who have provided a stable of Trump skeptics, some more vocal than others, are also falling in line, save for a few. Trump is even picking up backing from a New York lawmaker in a House district that Biden won last time, with more swing-district Republican­s expected to join.

What becomes glaring now are the holdouts, most notably Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, and a few top Republican senators, who appear deeply wary of Trump’s return and have yet to give him the nod.

“I don’t have any announceme­nt to make on the presidenti­al election, in fact, you all may recall I’ve stayed essentiall­y out of it,” said McConnell ahead of New Hampshire. He had issued a scathing indictment of Trump in 2021, blaming the defeated president for the Capitol attack, but voted to acquit him during the Senate impeachmen­t trial.

While McConnell has signaled he would support the eventual Republican nominee, the same comment the second-ranking Republican Sen. John Thune of South Dakota made Wednesday to reporters at the Capitol, that’s usually not good enough for Trump.

For Trump, a supportive nod is not sufficient. He wants a full-throated endorsemen­t.

Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a key Trump ally, said it’s a moment of “true change” for the GOP. Any Republican who isn’t willing to adapt to his policies, “we are completely eradicatin­g from the party.”

“It’s true!” she wrote later on social media, posting her interview remarks.

So far, Trump has received endorsemen­ts from 30 of the Republican senators and some 120 Republican members of the House — far and away beyond those for Haley or even DeSantis, a former congressma­n who suspended his campaign after a disappoint­ing finish in Iowa. He later endorsed Trump.

“People want to get behind the nominee,” lamented Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, the only senator who voted to convict Trump on both impeachmen­ts, including on the charge of inciting the insurrecti­on at the Capitol.

“Just like four years ago and four years before that — people say pretty strong things,” Romney said. “And then when he becomes a nominee, they just kiss the ring, as Donald Trump has said.”

And you?

“Oh, I’m not going to be doing that,” Romney said.

 ?? ALEX WONG/GETTY ?? Former President Donald Trump celebrates his New Hampshire primary win over Nikki Haley on Tuesday night in Nashua.
ALEX WONG/GETTY Former President Donald Trump celebrates his New Hampshire primary win over Nikki Haley on Tuesday night in Nashua.

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