Trump's 'once-unbreakable' base is 'fraying' — and consequences are coming

Trump's 'once-unbreakable' base is 'fraying' — and consequences are coming
President Donald Trump adjust his ball cap next to first lady Melania Trump at the White House in Washington, D.C., October 30, 2025. REUTERS/Kylie Cooper

President Donald Trump adjust his ball cap next to first lady Melania Trump at the White House in Washington, D.C., October 30, 2025. REUTERS/Kylie Cooper

Trump

President Donald Trump's bond to his MAGA base of supporters is "fraying" after seeming "once-unbreakable," according to a new breakdown from The i Paper, and the electoral consequences are coming.

Writing the outlet on Tuesday, journalist and editor Billy Freeman noted that the Iran war has been the bridge too far for many of Trump's prominent backers. He highlighted comments from podcaster Joe Rogan, who called the war "so insane," and former Fox News host Megyn Kelly, who shared a post on social media saying that it was "not worth losing the midterm [elections] over."

"While running to return to the presidency in 2024, Trump had told followers that there would be no new wars if he replaced Joe Biden in the White House," Freeman wrote. "And on election night, while accepting victory, Trump told supporters, 'I’m not going to start a war. I’m going to stop wars.'”

Freeman also spoke with Dr. John Hart, the former head of the political science department at the Australian National University and an expert on American governance, who argued that MAGA supporters are feeling that Trump's focus is drifting away from the promises he once made to them.

"The amount of attention that Trump has to give to international matters distracts from his commitment to make America great again, and he’s now beginning to see the effects of that on his level of support amongst grass-roots Republicans," Hart explained.

Hart further anticipated that this fracturing base will have consequences for Republicans in the upcoming midterms, but only to a point, given the impact of GOP gerrymandering efforts.

"[The MAGA split] will damage Republican election prospects in the House and possibly even in the Senate,” he added. “Many pundits expect the Republicans to lose control of the House. The Senate is more uncertain. But, the mid-term elections are complicated by the current efforts to gerrymander House seats by mid-decade redistricting and, at the moment, it’s not possible to anticipate the precise effects of the gerrymandering because much of it is still in progress."

Freeman also highlighted the notable disdain for Trump and his agenda brewing amongst young voters, who supported him in notable numbers in 2024. The war, he explained, is proving particularly toxic with this key voting block, while "many young Republicans are voicing disquiet at the two men seen as leading the race to be the party’s nominee."

"Many view [Vice President JD] Vance and Marco Rubio, the U.S. Secretary of State, as figures of the party establishment with the wrong priorities," Freeman wrote, adding that some of these young Republicans are voicing increased support for Tucker Carlson as a 2028 candidate.

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