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Former US president Donald Trump speaks during a “Save America” rally in Anchorage, Alaska, in July. Photo: AFP

Donald Trump at war with fellow Republicans as he eyes new White House run

  • The ex-president called Ron DeSantis, his main threat in the party, ‘DeSanctimonious’, and said another potential rival’s name ‘sounds Chinese’
  • Trump is expected to announce his 2024 candidacy within days, but Republicans are blaming him for their weaker-than-expected midterms performance
Donald Trump

Days before he is expected to launch another White House run, Donald Trump is again at war with his own party, angrily denouncing potential rivals, airing old grievances and acting more like the insurgent who stormed to victory six years ago than a former president.

The former one-term president has slapped the man seen as his main threat, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, with the label “DeSanctimonious” and tried out a nickname with a racist tone for Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin as he looks to ward off any challengers for his party’s 2024 nomination.

For Trump, who has long viewed himself as a wrecking ball within the party, it’s much same playbook he ran in his successful 2016 campaign and in his failed 2020 re-election bid.

But it comes as a growing chorus of Republicans are blaming him for their weaker-than-expected performance in Tuesday’s congressional elections and when Trump may need to build support across the party rather than drive it away.

Powerful Murdoch media dumps on ‘loser’ Trump

Erstwhile Republican luminaries such as former New Jersey governor Chris Christie and former congressman Paul Ryan and conservative outlets such as Fox News Channel and the Wall Street Journal have criticised Trump for injecting himself into the midterms, arguing that his involvement spurred Democratic turnout and alienated independent voters.

Trump in turn has blasted back, accusing the media without evidence of favouring DeSantis in a conspiracy to deny him the nomination.

Trump will announce next week that he is taking another shot at the presidency, his long-time adviser Jason Miller said on Friday.

“Trump is going to announce on Tuesday that he is running for president,” Miller told former Trump aide Steve Bannon on his popular “War Room” podcast.

“It’s gonna be a very professional, very buttoned-up announcement,” he added.

Trump has a history of marginalising his opponents with derisive nicknames and rallying his supporters against them as he did in 2016 with rivals such as Jeb Bush and Marco Rubio.

“He frames people up and allows his supporters to knock them down,” said a Florida Republican strategist, who asked not to be identified to protect his relationship with Trump.

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Trump to make ‘very big announcement’ on November 15

Trump to make ‘very big announcement’ on November 15

But in recognition that the political landscape since 2016 may have markedly changed, people around Trump are trying to persuade him to soften his image, fearing that his fire-and-brimstone rhetoric is turning off a lot of voters who may like his policies but are starving for some normalcy, a senior adviser told Reuters.

There is also an effort under way to get Trump to focus less on past grievances.

“The 2016 campaign was about solving problems and offering ideas. We are trying to convince him to talk about the future. We’ll see what happens,” the adviser said.

With the party splintering, some of Trump’s allies are already trying to publicly demonstrate their loyalty.

‘Disappointing’ US midterms show how Trump could hurt Republicans for years

Elise Stefanik, the No 3 Republican in the US House of Representatives, endorsed him on Friday, through he has not yet launched a run and the first party primary is over a year away. Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia said on Twitter that successful Republican governors should stay in place and not try to run for president.

Neither DeSantis, who was convincingly re-elected to a second term on Tuesday, nor Youngkin, a first-term governor, have announced a presidential bid, although DeSantis is reportedly strongly considering one.

In a Friday post on his Truth Social network, Trump called Youngkin “Young Kin” and said, “sounds Chinese, doesn’t it?” Youngkin is not Chinese. The day earlier, Trump posted a long harangue about DeSantis that again called him Ron “DeSanctimonious” and said he owes his political fortunes to Trump.

Two Florida Republicans close to DeSantis predicted the governor would be wary of responding directly, keeping his focus on the state’s recovery from Hurricane Ian and policy issues.

Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin speaks during a campaign rally in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, on November 2. Photo: AP

By keeping out of the fray for now, they said, DeSantis would highlight how his governing style differs from Trump’s more combative and less policy-focused approach, they said.

Trump’s early presidential announcement may be viewed as an attempt to clear the field before the race even begins, but the sharpening criticism within the party suggests that will not happen.

Republicans had been expected to take control of the House by a wide margin but as of Friday were not assured of a takeover at all as votes continued to be tallied in several races.

In the Senate, Trump-backed candidates in states such as Pennsylvania and Georgia stumbled and his pick in Arizona, Blake Masters, lost to Democratic Senator Mark Kelly.

Additional reporting by Agence France-Presse

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