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REPUBLICANS DUMP TRUMP, SAY HE’S ON HIS OWN

  • Writer: By The Financial District
    By The Financial District
  • Jan 10, 2021
  • 1 min read

President Donald Trump’s steadfast grip on Republicans in Washington is beginning to crumble, leaving him more politically isolated than at any other point in his turbulent administration, Steve Peoples and Jonathan Lemire reported for the Associated Press (AP).

After riling up a crowd that later staged a violent siege of the US Capitol, Trump appears to have lost some of his strongest allies, including South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham. Two Cabinet members and at least a half dozen aides have resigned.


A handful of congressional Republicans are openly considering whether to join a renewed push for impeachment.


One GOP senator who has split with Trump in the past called on him to resign and questioned whether she would stay in the party.


“I want him out,” Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska told The Anchorage Daily News. “He has caused enough damage.”


The insurrection on the heels of a bruising election loss in Georgia accomplished what other low points in Trump’s presidency did not: force Republicans to fundamentally reassess their relationship with a leader who has long abandoned tradition and decorum.


The result could reshape the party, threatening the influence that Trump craves while creating a divide between those in Washington and activists in swaths of the country where the president is especially popular.


“At this point, I won’t defend him anymore,” said Ari Fleischer, a former White House press secretary for George W. Bush and a GOP strategist who voted for Trump. “I won’t defend him for stirring the pot that incited the mob. He’s on his own.”





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