For nearly a decade, President Donald Trump has had what many experts describe as an “iron-clad grip” on his party. However, July appears to mark what conservative columnist Matt Lewis described as the beginning of the end of the Trump era.
“It took six months into President Trump’s second term to get here, but something shifted in Trump World this month,” Lewis wrote in an opinion piece published Friday in The Hill.
“The administration’s handling of the Jeffrey Epstein case – including its assertion that a ‘client list’ doesn’t exist – sent tremors through the MAGA ecosystem, creating a permission structure for key players on the right to start treating Trump like a lame duck.”
The Trump administration’s handling of the case on Epstein – the convicted sex offender who died in 2019 awaiting trial on sex-trafficking charges – has indeed been an anomaly for Trump, who ordinarily comes out of any scandal unscathed by his most loyal supporters, and in many cases, even more popular, such as after his dozens of criminal indictments last year.
On Epstein, however, Trump’s hesitancy to release documents related to the disgraced financier, along with his attacks on those who demand transparency, have sent a shockwave through MAGA world that Lewis said appeared to mark a turning point in the president’s control of the GOP.
“Taken together – the reality of Trump’s lame-duck status, being out of touch with much of his base and now the physical deterioration – we are left with a picture of a man whose once iron-clad grip on his party is finally beginning to loosen,” Lewis wrote.
“The base might not say it outright. MAGA influencers certainly won’t admit it – but they absolutely see it. And more importantly, they’re starting to act on it. The jostling has begun.”
Trump’s path to irrelevancy, Lewis argued, will also likely ignite a crisis in the Republican Party, a party Lewis said had been “hollowed out” by Trump and had its institutions “scorched.”
“This is the tragedy and farce of the post-Trump GOP: it bet everything on a single man, and now it has no idea how to function without him,” Lewis wrote.
Tag Archives: GOP
LA Times: California will see ‘devastating’ healthcare cuts under GOP bill, Newsom says
As many as 3.4 million Californians could lose their state Medi-Cal health insurance under the budget bill making its way through the U.S. Senate, Gov. Gavin Newsom said Friday.
Newsom said the proposed cuts to healthcare in the “one big, beautiful bill,” a cornerstone of President Trump’s second-term agenda, could force the closure of struggling rural hospitals, reduce government food assistance for those in need and drive up premiums for people who rely on Covered California, the state’s Affordable Care Act health insurance marketplace.
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Roughly 15 million Californians, more than a third of the state, are on Medi-Cal, the state’s version of Medicaid, with some of the highest percentages in rural counties that supported Trump in the November election. More than half of California children receive healthcare coverage through Medi-Cal.
Daily Digest: The GOP is fed up with Trump
Donald Trump’s decision to attack in Iran has all of America on edge. And many Republicans are fed-up with the US president.
A military decision of this magnitude marks a major departure from Trump’s long-held reluctance to commit U.S. forces abroad. It has derailed his broader foreign policy objectives, such as improving ties with Gulf nations, brokering a peace deal in Ukraine, and finalizing international trade agreements.
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The divide caused by Trump due to the situation in Iran is simply adding to Donald Trump’s problems. Prior to the war between Iran and Israel, surveys conducted nationwide indicated a notable drop in voter support for President Trump, signaling a potentially difficult terrain within the Republican Party as he contends with fluctuating public opinion.
MSNBC: Trump’s rhetoric about food assistance gets weird as Republicans target food stamps
Those who trust the president’s word that Republican-imposed cuts will “give everybody much more food” are in for a dramatic surprise.
“You campaigned on lowering the price of groceries. How can you justify cutting food assistance in this [budget] bill?” the journalist asked. Trump’s response was, among other things, odd.
“Let me just tell you, the cut is going to give everybody much more food because prices are coming way down. Groceries are down,” the president replied.
It’s difficult to say with confidence exactly what he was even trying to say. If Republicans successfully cut food assistance to low-income Americans, everyone will have more food? Because grocery prices have gone down?
If I had to guess, I think Trump intended to argue that the GOP’s cuts to food assistance wouldn’t matter, because low-income families will find it easier to afford groceries because of some kind of deflationary trend the president believes is underway.
But this is bizarre on multiple levels.
When the system’s on fire, don’t be surprised if someone strikes a match.

On Sunday morning, March 30, the Republican Party of New Mexico’s headquarters in Albuquerque went up in flames. It wasn’t a massive blaze — firefighters arrived just before 6 a.m. and quickly extinguished it — but the damage was done. Windows were scorched, the front entryway blackened, and three words spray-painted in stark accusation across the facade:“ICE = KKK.”
No one was hurt, and for that, we’re grateful. We’ll say it plainly: Closer to the Edge does not condone violence, arson, the torching of buildings, or setting anything on fire — including the Constitution. But we also won’t pretend this came out of nowhere.
This is what happens when institutions treat human lives as expendable. When law enforcement disappears 48 New Mexico residents in a week and refuses to say where they are. When immigrant families live in fear of a knock at the door and GOP lawmakers turn that fear into campaign fuel. When political leaders enable state brutality and then act shocked when someone fights fire with fire.
Let’s be clear: setting fire to the New Mexico GOP headquarters was wrong. But we’re not surprised. The system was already burning.
THE ICE COLD REALITY IN NEW MEXICO
Earlier this month, ICE agents raided communities across Albuquerque, Santa Fe, and Roswell. Forty-eight people vanished into federal custody. No public names. No access to lawyers. No transparency. The American Civil Liberties Union of New Mexico filed a human rights complaint, accusing ICE of “enforced disappearances.” If that term sounds dramatic, consider this: families still don’t know where their loved ones are. That’s not enforcement. That’s terror by bureaucracy.
The GOP has been largely silent about this. Instead, they’ve accused progressives of “implicitly encouraging” political violence. But let’s ask: what do they call disappearing 48 people in a state where ICE has already been accused of harassing Native American tribal members?
You can’t cry foul when someone torches your front door if your policies have been setting people’s lives on fire for years.
THE NEW MEXICO GOP’S TRACK RECORD
The New Mexico Republican Party has long supported policies that chip away at the safety net — opposing the ACA, resisting Medicaid expansion, and pushing work requirements that often leave disabled and poor residents without care. They’ve backed school voucher schemes that bleed public schools dry, and their past leadership has flirted with reinstating the death penalty. They champion border militarization while remaining quiet on the abuse of detainees in private immigration prisons scattered across the state.
Let’s not forget: in 2020, someone spray-painted “STILL TRAITORS” on this same building. That was after a former GOP congressional intern was arrested — and later cleared — for vandalizing it. This is the third time since 2017 the headquarters has been targeted. That doesn’t justify anything. But it does raise a question: why does this building keep attracting fire?
CONDEMNING VIOLENCE, DEMANDING TRUTH
Closer to the Edge stands against political violence. We don’t burn buildings. We don’t burn bridges. We don’t burn the Constitution — even when others already have it halfway in the shredder.
But let’s not play dumb. A system that allows people to be snatched in silence, detained without due process, and left to rot in secret — that system invites fury. And when neither party is willing to fully confront that truth, someone eventually does it with a match.
The GOP doesn’t get to play victim while enabling policies that victimize others. And the Democrats don’t get to wash their hands with bland statements while ICE raids continue under their watch.
This is not just about one fire in Albuquerque. It’s about the fire running underneath this country — fueled by injustice, fanned by indifference, and waiting for anyone desperate enough to light the surface.

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