President Donald Trump’s years-long crusade against election fraud is sparking fears inside his own party that he’s about to sabotage their chances of hanging on to the Senate.
The 80-year-old president has been on a tear, demanding the so-called SAVE America Act get rammed through Congress by whatever means necessary, even if it means torching the Senate filibuster or firing the chamber’s parliamentarian to get there, reported Politico.
“None of this should be new,” said a senior White House official. “They’ve heard it for the last three years, essentially.”
This week, he took the fight nuclear, holding up the confirmation of his own pick for director of national intelligence, Jay Clayton, until lawmakers moved on the bill.
It’s the latest flashpoint in a brewing GOP civil war, with insiders warning the president’s stolen-election obsession is colliding head-on with Senate Republicans’ survival instincts five months before voters head to the polls.
Trump still hasn’t let go of his baseless belief that the 2020 election was rigged against him, and allies say that grievance is driving his insistence that the SAVE America Act — which would impose voter ID and citizenship-verification requirements — is the only thing standing between Republicans and a Democratic triumph in November.
“My God, we were about to fast track the DNI director and now we’re in this holding pattern,” said Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC). “At some point, we’ve got to return ourselves to being a board of directors versus like a manufacturing facility that just creates whatever product the White House wants. It’s not the way you can manage the Senate agenda over time.”
Republican strategists say the math doesn’t add up.
Polling suggests voters are far more locked in on the economy — inflation, gas prices, the cost of living — than on election integrity fights most Americans aren’t tracking. One person close to Senate dynamics put it bluntly: Voters who decide general elections care about pocketbook issues, not arcane Senate procedure.
Making matters messier, Trump has waded into GOP primaries himself, backing Ken Paxton in Texas and squeezing Indiana state senators who balked at redrawing maps in his favor — moves critics call a costly distraction. One longtime GOP strategist pointed to Georgia’s Senate seats, lost in back-to-back cycles after Trump-backed picks flopped, as a cautionary tale.
Trump allies are losing patience with Senate Majority Leader John Thune, accusing him of treating the president “worse than a lame duck,” as right-wing podcaster Steve Bannon said.
“If everyone just follows his lead, follows the blueprints he’s laid out, and runs on the record that he has, then I think we’ll fare well,” the senior White House official said.
Thune’s camp, for its part, insists he’s trying to keep the party focused on its real wins — tax cuts and economic policy — rather than chasing a fraud narrative that may not move a single swing voter.
“The president didn’t accept the results of the 2020 election. He still thinks he won. He wants to prevent what he calls cheating,” said a former administration official who’s still close to the White House. “The Senate’s kind of like, this isn’t the issue that’s going to keep us the Senate, or gain seats … This is a primary debate, this is not a general election conversation.”
With control of the Senate hanging by a thread, the question gripping Washington isn’t whether Democrats are stealing elections. It’s whether Trump’s fixation on the idea ends up costing Republicans the one they’re trying to win.
“Poll after poll shows that voters — the ones who decide general elections — are increasingly driven by the economy, not the SAVE America Act or arcane Senate rules, which is why John Thune has been practically begging his colleagues and the president to focus on wins like the president’s signature achievement: The One Big Beautiful Bill,” the former administration official said.
“It’s no accident that he’s clearly trying to reset the narrative amid the litany of daily distractions,” that persona added.
The post Trump’s ‘daily distractions’ drown out GOP priorities and threaten majority: report appeared first on Raw Story.




