**Republican Party Navigates 2026 Midterms Amid Trump Influence, Abortion and Foreign Policy Divides** Podcast Por  arte de portada

**Republican Party Navigates 2026 Midterms Amid Trump Influence, Abortion and Foreign Policy Divides**

**Republican Party Navigates 2026 Midterms Amid Trump Influence, Abortion and Foreign Policy Divides**

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This is your RNC News podcast.

The big story inside the Republican Party and the Republican National Committee right now is how to navigate a difficult 2026 map while keeping Donald Trump at the center of the brand but not letting his controversies drown out the midterm message.

According to NPR, Trump just met with House Republicans and offered what he called a roadmap to victory in the midterms, urging them to focus more on affordability, the economy, and health care, while also telling them to show “flexibility” on long‑standing GOP opposition to using federal dollars for abortion in order to get a broader health care deal done. That call for flexibility on abortion is creating immediate tension with social conservatives who see any softening as a red line, and it highlights ongoing struggles for party unity on reproductive issues and in‑vitro fertilization policy.

At the same time, a growing number of congressional Republicans are openly pushing back on Trump’s foreign‑policy instincts. Time magazine reports that several prominent GOP lawmakers, including Senator Lisa Murkowski, Senator John Thune, and Representative Don Bacon, have broken ranks with Trump over his renewed annexation threats toward Greenland, warning that military talk about a NATO ally is dangerous, demeaning, and risks a rift inside the alliance. This split underscores a broader foreign‑policy divide between more traditional national‑security Republicans and Trump’s more aggressive, unilateral posture.

On Capitol Hill, House Speaker Mike Johnson is trying to project a message of unity and competence as Republicans head into the election year. In a recent statement from his office, Johnson said there is “only one party capable of restoring American greatness” and framed Republicans as the party of tax cuts, lower costs, and “Agenda 250,” a forward‑looking policy push built around extending Trump‑era tax reductions, driving down prices, and emphasizing public safety. Johnson is also using contrast with Democrats on Venezuela, blasting them for questioning Trump’s seizure of Nicolás Maduro while House Republicans celebrate the operation as a strike against a “narco‑terrorist dictator.”

At the state level, Republican organizations closely linked to the RNC are already in 2026 campaign mode. Politico reports that the Republican Party of Florida is gathering in Orlando for trainings, strategy sessions, and speeches from top officials, touting Florida as a national model for conservative governance and promising to target traditionally Democratic counties like Duval and Palm Beach. The Florida GOP is also taking the lead in coordinating all 2026 statewide Republican primary debates, signaling a more centralized, party‑driven approach to shaping candidate fields and messaging.

Across these developments, listeners see a party trying to lock in Trump‑aligned economic and cultural themes, manage internal splits over abortion and foreign policy, and use RNC‑aligned state parties as engines for organizing and debate control heading into a pivotal midterm year.

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