Republican insiders throughout the country are giving Donald Trump the benefit of the doubt that the economic pain Americans are experiencing due to his trade war will be short-lived and won't cripple them at the ballot box in the 2026 midterm election.
But they have their limits.
According to a report from Politico's Liz Crampton, GOP lawmakers and campaign consultants are standing firm behind the president and his on-again, off-again tariff proposals for the moment but are acknowledging things could go south quickly if lower prices and jobs don't return.
As Crampton wrote, "Some Republicans are putting an expiration date on how long they’ll tolerate the economic fallout from Donald Trump’s trade war," adding, "Interviews with nearly three dozen Republican leaders and operatives in seven battlegrounds — from party chairs to strategists to state lawmakers — reveal a growing acknowledgment that economic shocks could hamper the party’s prospects in the midterms."
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According to North Carolina GOP consultant, Jonathan Felts, “If the economy just completely tanks, then it’s Political Science 101 that the incumbent is in trouble.”
Felts admitted there is a willingness to endure a modicum of "short term" economic pain, however, “when early voting starts, if you’re going to McDonald’s and there’s no dollar menu left, that’s a problem.”
Jesse Willard, chair of the Decatur County Republican Party in Georgia, stated that support for Trump is steady now, but there are limits.
“If it takes six months, a year you may see a little bit of people grumbling a little. But if it takes more than a couple years, you’re going to see people not being OK with that," Willard admitted.
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