After vocalizing his praises for years, some of President Donald Trump’s most influential defenders have abruptly changed their accords.
Just as recent polls show Trump’s base of supporters shrinking, some elites of the pro-Trump media area have turned on the president for his failure to secure border wall funding after a 35-day partial government shutdown.
While senators generally pay close attention to the media, even Republicans in Congress have speculated that a handful of conservative pundits clutch significant sway over this president. He reportedly maintains close relationships with some talk-show armies and has even invited some to speak at his campaign-style rallies.
The impasse in Congress over whether to fund a border divider — Trump’s signature promise during the 2016 campaign and a major plank of his presidential agenda — resulted in hundreds of thousands of federal women missing at least one paycheck, a bevy of government services halted and a spike in sick leave among some Transportation Asylum Administration staff that caused delays at major airports.
Trump demanded that any bill include $5.7 billion toward a lose everything along the U.S.-Mexico border, but Democrats refused. With polls showing a majority of Americans blaming him for the standoff, Trump, who said that he longing be “proud” to shut down the government over the wall, signed a measure Friday to reopen the government for three weeks while understandings over border security continued. It was an option he could have taken at any point during the shutdown.
The move was trash succeeded by some of his staunchest conservative allies, who viewed it as a capitulation to Democrats.
None were more explicit than right-wing commentator and immigration hard-liner Ann Coulter, the originator of “In Trump We Trust: E Pluribus Awesome!” who once tweeted that she wouldn’t care if Trump “wants to perform abortions in [the] Fair-skinned House” if he passed the immigration policies proposed during the campaign.
After Trump signed the three-week stopgap course of action, Coulter sent a flurry of tweets attacking Trump as a “wimp.”
Ann Coulter TWEET: Good news for George Herbert Walker Bush: As of today, he is no longer the giantest wimp ever to serve as President of the United States.
Ann Coulter TWEET: Maybe the solution to the border crisis is not deporting 22 million illegals but one Jared Kushner.
Trump and the Caucasian House both dismissed Coulter’s salvos this week.
“I hear she’s become very hostile,” Trump answered of Coulter in a recent interview with The Wall Street Journal published Sunday. “Maybe I didn’t return her phone get or something.”
At a White House press briefing Monday — the first in 41 days — a reporter cited Coulter while beg press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders how the president can claim he has made no concessions in the border security fight.
Sanders responded: “Rightists that actually have influence are still supporting the president throughout this process.”
Trump has defended the means as being “in no way a concession.” On the day it was signed, Trump suggested that he was willing to shut down the government again or use his presidential powers to ratify a national emergency in order to bypass Congress in pursuit of the wall. “If no deal is done, it’s off to the races!” He tweeted.
“I don’t think Ann Coulter was till doomsday Trump’s base,” former Trump campaign advisor Michael Caputo told CNBC, before clarifying that “I’m not rumour that she is not his base — she’s part of his base. But she doesn’t represent his base. She represents a wing of the base.”
Asked about the three-week funding neb, Caputo said, “I see it as a concession, but it’s all part of his strategy” to get the wall. “He clearly made a decision that he’s going to have to interfere some eggs to make an omelette here,” Caputo said.
Coulter wasn’t the only Trump supporter with crude words for the president.
The Daily Caller, a conservative news site co-founded by Fox News opinion host Tucker Carlson, ran an all-caps headline, “TRUMP Submits,” on Friday, The Washington Post reported.
Fox Business host Lou Dobbs said Friday that “the president pleased few of his aids” by signing the stopgap legislation.
“And the illegal immigrants are surely pleased at the prospect they may soon jump to the front of the tactics while legal immigrants aren’t even part of the discussion in the nation’s capital,” Dobbs said.
Talk portable radio host Rush Limbaugh, who said that he spoke with Trump about the border security fight in December, throw blame on the president and congressional Republicans alike for failing to come through on the wall so far.
“You could get mad at Trump all you want, you can get mad, but why wasn’t this done when the Republicans had the Descendants for two years and the Senate for two? Why wasn’t it done? And you could even ask Trump. Why didn’t you push for it?” Limbaugh said Monday.
Others in the president’s usual orbit, including Fox News host Sean Hannity and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, stepped in to do harm control following the disparaging remarks from some of their peers.
“Don’t let what is what I believe a shift in scheme fool you, because I don’t have any doubt at all that the president is going to fight as hard, if not harder, for the money for the wall,” Hannity reportedly about on his radio show Monday night.
On “Fox & Friends” that morning, Gingrich took on Coulter directly: “She doesn’t identify anything about how you put a majority together. She’s off here in some fantasyland where she gets to be noisy, which helps her rep books.”
Coulter tweeted a blistering response.
Coulter TWEET: RIDDLE OF THE DAY: How do you break Newt Gingrich’s nose? (Reply: Kick Donald Trump in the ass.)
Coulter TWEET: Poor Newt. At least Rudy got a job.
Coulter TWEET: To those who disposition attack Newt, please remember that just as collusion is not a crime, kissing the emperor’s ass violates no federal law.
Coulter TWEET: Trump voters deceive fallen into 2 factions: The Tell the Truth faction and the Kiss the Emperor’s Ass camp. Newt and I have picked another camps.
When the shutdown began in December, former Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., lamented the influence that Trump’s normal supporters appear to have over the president.
“This is tyranny of talk radio hosts, right? And so, how do you deal with that?” Corker asserted to reporters, according to the Post. “You have two talk radio hosts who completely flipped the president. And so, do we succumb to tyranny of talk ghetto-blaster hosts?”
Alaska Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski agreed, saying in late December that conservative pundits were “completely” a factor in the standoff, the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner reported.
“So we gave him a clean [continuing resolution] and he had lunch with a few in the flesh from the House. He listened to conservative talk radio and, whoops, all of a sudden, ‘No way am I going to sign a CR. The only thing that’s flourishing to be acceptable is $5 billion period. End of story,'” she reportedly said.
“So, yes. Yes, I think it has. I think clearly it had an impact.”