Why most Republicans don’t support Trump anymore

Trump 2024
A question of when
Do people still love him as much as he thinks they do?
46% would prefer another candidate
Up to the Department of Justice to decide if Trump is a criminal
Trump allowed and even encouraged the violence of his supporters
The Wall Street Journal also against Trump
Trump’s inexcusable attitude
Where does Murdoch stand?
Even Fox dismissed Trump’s false claims of election fraud
Tucker Carlson is still on Trump’s side
Republicans against Trump
Chaney believes Trump “lit the flame” for the Capitol riot
The case against Trump is made by his own supporters
He may not be liked, but he’s still feared
The question is: will the Department of Justice file charges against him?
Can the Republican Party defend an anti-establishment?
“The most persecuted person in the United States”
Who dares to stand up to Trump?
Even more polarization?
Trump 2024

Donald Trump has not made explicit his intention to run for the 2024 presidential election but at this point, it’s clear that he’s going to do it.

A question of when

In an interview for New York magazine, he said he’s made a decision and the only question for him is when to announce it.  However, Trump is beginning to run into serious obstacles in his own ideological ranks.

Do people still love him as much as he thinks they do?

"Half of Republican voters are ready to leave Trump behind," The New York Times headlined this July, based on a poll.

46% would prefer another candidate

According to the New York Times poll, up to 46% of Republican voters would prefer another candidate for 2024. Is Trump's power faltering as the leader of Republican America?

"Unworthy of being president"

In an article signed by the Editorial Board of the conservative newspaper The New York Post, they wrote that Trump is "unworthy of being president" for his attitude on January 6 during the Capitol riot.

Up to the Department of Justice to decide if Trump is a criminal

"It is up to the Department of Justice to decide if this is a crime. But as a matter of principle, as a matter of character, Trump has proven himself unworthy to be the chief executive of this country again," says The New York Post article about Trump’s attitude surrounding the Capitol riot.

Trump allowed and even encouraged the violence of his supporters

As has been shown in the hearings of the Congressional Committee investigating the assault on the Capitol, Trump allowed the violence of his followers and even promoted it with incendiary tweets.

The Wall Street Journal also against Trump

The Wall Street Journal also released an article signed by the Editorial Board on July 22, harshly criticizing Trump's attitude during the Capitol riots.

Trump’s inexcusable attitude

For The Wall Street Journal, Trump's attitude is inexcusable and his Editorial Board considers that he "failed" and, unlike Mike Pence (the then vice president), he did not pass the judgment that such a situation entailed.

Where does Murdoch stand?

Both The Wall Street Journal and The New York Post are owned by tycoon Rupert Murdoch, who also owns Fox, a reference network for Republicans in America.

Even Fox dismissed Trump’s false claims of election fraud

Fox was, without a doubt, Trump's network, his most faithful supporter. Nevertheless, when it came to the convulsive election night of November 3, 2020, they declared Biden the winner, dismissing the conspiracy theories that denounced election fraud.

Tucker Carlson is still on Trump’s side

However, the most powerful star of Fox, Tucker Carlson, accused Biden of persecuting patriots in his conspiracy documentary ‘Patriot Purge’.

Republicans against Trump

Be that as it may, some Republican’s rebellion against him is a fact both in the media and in the Republican Party itself, where there is an undisputed leader of the resistance to 'Trumpism': Congresswoman Liz Cheney.

Chaney believes Trump “lit the flame” for the Capitol riot

Liz Cheney is very active in the Congressional Committee investigating the assault on Capitol Hill and where she and another colleague are the only representatives of the Republican Party. Cheney is clear in her belief  that Trump "lit the flame of the attack."

The case against Trump is made by his own supporters

“The case against Donald Trump, in these hearings, is not made by witnesses who are his political enemies; it is instead a series of confessions by Trump’s own appointees, his own friends, his own campaign officials, people who worked for him for years,” said Cheney in the latest hearing.

He may not be liked, but he’s still feared

However, Trump continues to scare many prominent figures in his party and, according to the Politico website in July, "the Republican leaders will not stand in the way of Trump 2024."

The question is: will the Department of Justice file charges against him?

However, the fear of Trump may cease if his image is badly eroded if they file criminal charges against him, nd, truth is, they have a pretty strong case.

Can the Republican Party defend an anti-establishment?

From the different testimonies, it can be deduced that Trump wanted to remain in the White House at all costs and that, had it not been for the tripping up of some on his own team, he would have led the assault on Capitol Hill without much trouble.

“The most persecuted person in the United States”

In the face of all the criticism, Trump is playing the role of the victim. He has called the Jan. 6 hearings a “sham”, and back in Washington D.C., on July 27, he declared himself "the most persecuted person in the United States" and insisted on the theory of electoral fraud.

Who dares to stand up to Trump?

It is clear that Trump provokes serious doubts among leaders and voters of the Republican Party. But the rebellion that seems to have begun amongst Republicans against him has a clear limit: no one in the Republican Party seems capable of facing him in a primary.

Even more polarization?

So when Trump officially announces his candidacy for 2024, as is expected, the United States will once again peer into the abyss of extreme polarization.

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