GOP Fractures Over Trump's Iran Strategy as Party Grapples with Isolationist-Interventionist Divide and Economic Concerns
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The US Republican Party and RNC are grappling with deep fractures over President Trump's war on Iran, which has exposed tensions between isolationists and interventionists. On Newsmax, host Rob Schmitt highlighted how the conflict has split the GOP, with critics like Nick Fuentes opposing bombings while Trump demands Iran's unconditional surrender to halt its nuclear program and missile threats. Dave Rubin defended Trump, noting his long-standing anti-Iran stance dating back decades, distinguishing it from endless wars. Al Jazeera reports Vice President JD Vance, once an isolationist Iraq vet, now balancing his past rhetoric against advocating the administration's strikes, risking his hold on the party's anti-intervention wing as he eyes 2028.
House Republicans at their policy retreat struggled to address soaring gas prices and affordability amid the war's economic fallout, per Politico, with leaders like Speaker Mike Johnson fixated on a Trump-backed elections bill and reconciliation despite voter concerns. Rep. Richard Hudson touted past wins like tax cuts and school choice, but acknowledged more action is needed on pocketbook issues.
In Georgia, Scripps News covers a heated April 7 runoff for Marjorie Taylor Greene's old House seat, pitting Trump-endorsed Republican Clay Fuller, a district attorney, against Democrat Shawn Harris, a moderate farmer and general who overperformed in the special election. Statewide, Capitol Beat notes high turnover looming in 2026 legislative races, with Republicans defending slim majorities amid retirements and challengers.
Trump hit the trail in Ohio and Kentucky, touring Thermo Fisher Scientific to boast drug price cuts and rallying in Rep. Thomas Massie's district, slamming the defiant Republican as a "nutjob" and boosting primary challenger Ed Gallrein. At Verst Logistics, he touted manufacturing and no-tax policies on tips and Social Security, projecting strength despite job cuts and market jitters from Iran.
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