Republicans turn on Trump at CPAC: “Can’t stand the guy”…..

The president’s dwindling support among Americans—including within

A Generational Divide On Full Display

Many young men attending this year’s CPAC talked of growing unhappiness with the president among their peers, suggesting a significant shift away from Trump for this group of voters which overwhelmingly supported him in 2024.

According to data from the Center for Information & Research on Civic Learning and Engagement (CIRCLE), 56 percent of men born between 1997 and 2012—Gen Zers—voted for Trump in 2024, against 41 percent of women in the same age cohort.

And while much has been said of young American men’s disillusionment with the U.S. political system, the economy, and the way immigration was being handled under Joe Biden, many of these same voters are now feeling like Trump failed to keep his promises to them.

At the center of this perceived betrayal is the U.S. and Israel’s joint strikes on Iran on February 28, which started the ongoing war in the Middle East which has caused energy prices to spike in the U.S. and the rest of the world.

Auburn University sophomore Sean O’Brien told the news

Auburn University sophomore Sean O’Brien told the news agency that he was “not happy” with talk of sending U.S. troops into the Middle East, describing such an idea as a potential “full betrayal.”

Crucially, CPAC attendees revealed a generational divide among conservatives in their feeling toward the president and his intervention in Iran. Older conservatives were much more forgiving than their younger peers.

“I don’t believe he started a new war. He was acting in response to a 40-year-old war by Iran,” 70-year-old retired defense contractor Joe Ropar of McKinney, Texas, told AP. “How long were we supposed to wait? I think he did what he had to do when he had to do it.”

But there are also older Republicans who are unhappy about the conflict. Outside of the conference, several conservatives—including those within the MAGA community—have expressed skepticism and even outright criticism of the war in Iran. Earlier this week, podcaster Steve Bannon, a MAGA loyalist, said that the conflict has become “a hard slog” which could cost the GOP crucial voters in the midterms.

Vying For Unity Ahead Of the Midterms

A growing GOP divide forming over Trump’s war

A growing GOP divide forming over Trump’s war in Iran risks making the party even more vulnerable to dramatic losses in this year’s midterms, which will see the Republican Party’s hold on the House and its razor-thin majority in the Senate in jeopardy.

“President Trump is not on the ballot, but his policies are,” the Rev. Franklin Graham said in Grapevine on Thursday, as reported by the Dallas Morning News. “We need a united front and go out and win these midterms. If we don’t, we’ll be through.”

A recent AP-NORC poll shows that Trump still enjoys the support of a majority of Republicans, with 86 percent of conservatives saying they approve of the president’s job performance. But his popularity is certainly at risk of fading as a majority of Americans (59 percent) say U.S. military action in Iran has been excessive.

Among Republicans, however, only 26 percent thought the Trump administration’s actions in the Middle East had gone too far.

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