Some Republican leaders begin to turn their backs on Donald Trump

Donald Trump menace les manifestants de Minneapolis et reçoit un ...

George W. Bush, Colin Powell or Mitt Romney, more and more influential figures in the Republican Party are turning away from Donald Trump or letting in doubts. The second is even the first to have stated openly that he will vote for Joe Biden.
A few months before the US presidential election, could the coronavirus pandemic and the George Floyd affair upset the cards? If the Democrats shoot red bullets on Donald Trump for his management, catastrophic they say, of these two crises, several Republicans also show a certain skepticism.

Certain tenors, or former tenors, of the Grand Old Party begin to criticize the policy of the outgoing president, sometimes openly, rarely head-on and often timidly. But the discontent rises little by little. To the point of making Donald Trump waver?

The president does not allow himself to be dismayed, sharply criticizing the personalities of his party who turn away from him and constantly recalling that the immense majority of the republican electoral base remains by his side. And it must be remembered that many Republicans did not support the billionaire in 2016 before finally joining him or wallowing in silence.

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