The Prague Post - A Trump challenge: uniting bitter Republicans

EUR -
AED 4.255164
AFN 80.514972
ALL 97.602132
AMD 444.99726
ANG 2.073339
AOA 1062.330086
ARS 1475.639859
AUD 1.786558
AWG 2.085272
AZN 1.96659
BAM 1.955748
BBD 2.339238
BDT 140.646293
BGN 1.95506
BHD 0.436783
BIF 3389.725554
BMD 1.158484
BND 1.490561
BOB 8.005858
BRL 6.434267
BSD 1.158579
BTN 99.700233
BWP 15.651723
BYN 3.7915
BYR 22706.295576
BZD 2.327259
CAD 1.593351
CDF 3343.385897
CHF 0.933154
CLF 0.029132
CLP 1117.937824
CNY 8.322211
CNH 8.325686
COP 4653.574184
CRC 584.589639
CUC 1.158484
CUP 30.699838
CVE 110.577108
CZK 24.652444
DJF 205.885996
DKK 7.464399
DOP 69.915166
DZD 151.197982
EGP 57.242916
ERN 17.377267
ETB 158.009705
FJD 2.618117
FKP 0.862864
GBP 0.864305
GEL 3.139818
GGP 0.862864
GHS 12.057084
GIP 0.862864
GMD 82.822822
GNF 10027.841648
GTQ 8.889766
GYD 242.296752
HKD 9.092823
HNL 30.526336
HRK 7.535018
HTG 152.115991
HUF 399.159879
IDR 18908.146323
ILS 3.895873
IMP 0.862864
INR 99.684081
IQD 1517.614653
IRR 48786.675598
ISK 141.821776
JEP 0.862864
JMD 185.735105
JOD 0.821387
JPY 172.244054
KES 150.025754
KGS 101.30965
KHR 4657.107266
KMF 492.938138
KPW 1042.600193
KRW 1613.039082
KWD 0.354172
KYD 0.965483
KZT 618.759034
LAK 24982.717601
LBP 103742.283923
LKR 349.160798
LRD 232.855086
LSL 20.690254
LTL 3.420704
LVL 0.700756
LYD 6.279223
MAD 10.476753
MDL 19.695651
MGA 5132.086314
MKD 61.558378
MMK 2431.630008
MNT 4154.634487
MOP 9.366874
MRU 46.10444
MUR 52.977317
MVR 17.840567
MWK 2011.708926
MXN 21.760427
MYR 4.919503
MZN 74.096625
NAD 20.690848
NGN 1771.044679
NIO 42.574227
NOK 11.952894
NPR 159.518796
NZD 1.955166
OMR 0.445438
PAB 1.158579
PEN 4.10912
PGK 4.776721
PHP 66.30818
PKR 330.167579
PLN 4.259168
PYG 8967.763655
QAR 4.217581
RON 5.073467
RSD 117.160059
RUB 90.415422
RWF 1664.162939
SAR 4.34541
SBD 9.62207
SCR 17.173361
SDG 695.658362
SEK 11.307521
SGD 1.490373
SHP 0.910387
SLE 26.471071
SLL 24292.844628
SOS 662.070664
SRD 42.727282
STD 23978.28952
SVC 10.137733
SYP 15062.437978
SZL 20.690945
THB 37.64454
TJS 11.076052
TMT 4.06628
TND 3.366846
TOP 2.713292
TRY 46.648092
TTD 7.864861
TWD 34.074529
TZS 3023.644083
UAH 48.504122
UGX 4150.890603
USD 1.158484
UYU 46.868765
UZS 14799.638982
VES 135.502128
VND 30305.953687
VUV 138.596269
WST 3.197572
XAF 655.945375
XAG 0.030418
XAU 0.000347
XCD 3.130862
XDR 0.813014
XOF 652.226574
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.600253
ZAR 20.682881
ZMK 10427.746868
ZMW 27.08152
ZWL 373.031526
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

A Trump challenge: uniting bitter Republicans
A Trump challenge: uniting bitter Republicans

A Trump challenge: uniting bitter Republicans

US Republicans have taken to social media in droves to burn their voter registration cards, renounce their political affiliation, and pledge never to vote for their party's presumptive nominee Donald Trump in November.

Text size:

Trump is basking in the glory of an all-but-certain victory in the chaotic GOP nomination race, after rivals Ted Cruz and John Kasich raised their white flags of surrender.

But Trump's rise presents a moment of truth for Republicans: can they rally around one of the most contentious presidential nominees in modern history?

Astounding displays of antagonism are coming from conservatives who under more normal circumstances would likely be backing the Republican standardbearer.

Startling images landed on Twitter Tuesday and Wednesday in the hours after the braggadocious billionaire's sweeping Indiana primary victory, including a shot of conservative writer Lachlan Markay and video of one Bryan Akner, both setting their voter registration cards alight.

One of the chief challenges on Trump's hands as he shifts from the nominations battle to a likely general election brawl against Democrat Hillary Clinton is how to win over Republicans infuriated by his candidacy.

Some conservative critics like former candidate and Louisiana ex-governor Bobby Jindal, who once branded Trump "dangerous" and ignorant, are biting the bullet and shuffling into line behind Trump.

Mainstream Senator Susan Collins said she would support Trump, but he will "have to mend a lot of fences" and halt what she called gratuitous insults that have marked his campaign.

The country's previous two Republican presidents, George W. Bush and his father George H.W. Bush, who undoubtedly bristled at Trump's bullying attacks on candidate Jeb Bush, have signaled through their offices that they will stay on the sidelines during this cycle.

George W. Bush "does not plan to participate in or comment on the presidential campaign," his personal aide Freddy Ford told the Texas Tribune.

Other Republicans are sounding like they intend to fight Trump every step of the way -- by voting for Clinton, if necessary.

- 'I'm with her' -

"The GOP is going to nominate for president a guy who reads the National Enquirer and thinks it's on the level," tweeted Mark Salter, a former senior advisor to 2008 Republican nominee John McCain, after Trump peddled the tabloid's conspiracy theory that linked Cruz's father to president John F. Kennedy's assassin.

"I'm with her," Salter added, repeating a Clinton campaign slogan.

Washington Examiner's managing editor, Philip Klein, tweeted that he had "officially de-registered as a Republican."

Erick Erickson, a respected conservative blogger, on Wednesday blasted Trump for supporting "white nationalists and racial grievance mongers," mistreating employees and bragging about his philandering past.

But he also took issue with the party's failure to "draw a line" against Trump's bigotry and insults.

"Why can't the GOP say this is unacceptable?" Erickson wrote on The Resurgent website, insisting he will "decline to help the voters in this country commit national suicide."

With Trump the presumptive nominee, the Republican Party was trapped in a balancing act of promoting their man while soothing the frustrations of the NeverTrump movement.

"There are some raw feelings out there," Republican National Committee spokesman Sean Spicer acknowledged on MSNBC.

Conservative lawmakers including Senator and former presidential candidate Lindsey Graham, Senator Ben Sasse and congressman Justin Amash, as well as 2012 GOP nominee Mitt Romney, are on a list compiled by The Hill of nearly 100 prominent Republicans who have pledged not to vote for The Donald.

Sasse said Wednesday he remained open to a third candidate, beyond Trump or Clinton, who would promote conservative values.

"I think some Republicans in the establishment will hold their nose and give tepid support to their nominee Donald Trump," senior fellow John Hudak of Washington think tank the Brookings Institution told AFP.

"But I think there's going to be a significant number of establishment Republicans who frankly will continue to run against Donald Trump," including some who "come out and endorse Clinton."

The NeverTrump movement, meanwhile, signalled it would continue to seek opportunities to oppose his nomination, and to help conservatives, particularly by "protecting Republican incumbents and down-ballot candidates, by distinguishing their values and principles from that of Trump."

Should Trump pivot from some of his divisive statements to a more presidential tone, he might draw skeptical Republicans into the voting booth to support him.

Others appear to be gone for good.

"I'll probably go with (Libertarian candidate) Gary Johnson," conservative strategist Brad Marston said.

"I don't see any room for me in today's GOP."

F.Prochazka--TPP