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BackTrump's Retribution Tour: Republican Party Solidly Under His Control
Trump's Retribution Tour: Republican Party Solidly Under His Control
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BBC News5/20/2026Politics3 min read

Trump's Retribution Tour: Republican Party Solidly Under His Control

Trump-backed candidates oust Republican incumbents, demonstrating his continued iron grip on the party despite potential electoral risks.

Quick Look

  • Donald Trump's retribution tour continues as Trump-backed candidates defeat Republican incumbents, including Rep.
  • Thomas Massie and Sen.
  • Bill Cassidy.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Donald Trump is engaged in a "retribution tour" against Republican critics. The Republican party is largely seen as Trump's party, with his influence remaining strong despite potential electoral risks. Several Republican incumbents have been defeated in primaries by Trump-backed candidates.

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The past few weeks had been billed as a retribution tour for Donald Trump, as he settles old scores with his critics within the Republican party.

Call it what you will, but the evidence is now overwhelming that the Republican party is Trump's party and nothing - not an unpopular war in Iran, not sagging poll numbers among the general public, not rising consumer prices, not concerns about billion-dollar White House ballrooms - has changed that.

Thomas Massie, the independent-minded congressman from Kentucky, was comfortably defeated on Tuesday in the Republican primary race to decide who goes forward to take on the Democrats in November's midterms. The Trump-backed candidate Ed Gallrein is heading towards a 55% share of the vote.

Republican rebel Massie, a constant thorn in Trump's side, is just the latest in a political casualty count that is now stretching into double figures. His transgressions were multitude.

He opposed Trump's tax-and-spending budget package last year because he said it drove up the federal deficit. He voted to curtail the president's military operations in Venezuela and Iran. And, perhaps most notably, he was the driving force behind efforts in the House of Representatives to force the release of Justice Department files on Jeffrey Epstein, the disgraced financier and sex offender with ties to the rich and powerful.

All this put Massie front and centre on Trump's enemies list – and led to a $20m effort to oust him from the congressional perch he had occupied for more than a decade.

He added that Massie had his enemies in the state politics – acquired by not playing nice with local business leaders and disregarding the everyday work of legislating in favour of high-publicity efforts. But in the end, he said, it came down to yet another simple display of Trump's iron grip on the Republican party.

Gallrien, Massie's handpicked Trump opponent, barely campaigned. He declined most debate and public forum invitations. He instead relied on the president's endorsement and millions of dollars of support it generated.

That proved to be enough – and it wasn't all that close, as the challenger coasted to what appears to be a double-digit victory.

Massie now joins Louisiana Senator Bill Cassidy, who lost to a Trump-endorsed rival in a Republican primary on Saturday, and five of seven Indiana state legislators opposed by the president last week among the ranks of the soon-to-be-unemployed politicians.

Next Tuesday, another incumbent senator, John Cornyn of Texas, may join them. Earlier on Tuesday, as Kentucky Republicans were still casting ballots, Trump endorsed his opponent, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, in next week's runoff election.

Unlike Massie, on Epstein and Iran, and Cassidy, who voted to convict Trump during his 2021 impeachment trial, Cornyn never clearly broke with Trump. Just last week, he proposed a bill that would name a Texas highway after him.

It didn't matter. Trump, instead, opted for the man he called a "true MAGA warrior", while dismissing Cornyn as a "good man" who was not sufficiently supportive when "times were tough".

Trump's last-minute Paxton endorsement caught Republican senators by surprise – and prompted flashes of anger. Unlike Massie, who had few allies in Congress, Cornyn was a former member of his party's Senate leadership team. He was a prolific fundraiser for his fellow Republicans. Having spent more than two decades in the chamber, he has friendships that run deep.

"I don't understand it," said Senator Susan Collins of Maine. "John Cornyn is an outstanding senator and deserved, in my judgement, the president's support."

Trump's willingness to target Republican incumbents may come at a cost. His polling numbers continue to show deep dissatisfaction with his performance on the economy, especially among independent voters. The loyal Republicans he has helped to victory may not be the best candidates in November to convince a wider electorate.

There is also the question of what these defeated Republicans do now in their final months.

Earlier on Tuesday, Cassidy voted for the first time to support a resolution limiting Trump's authority to conduct the Iran war. He also expressed his opposition to providing a billion dollars in security funding for Trump's proposed White House ballroom.

There are a growing number of Senate Republicans who are leaving the chamber at the end of this year – either willingly or because they lost to Trump-backed opponents. They could make life difficult for the president in the coming months, as he tries to push through new spending package or seeks to get administration nominees approved.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • John Cornyn will face a challenging runoff election against Ken Paxton.

    Likely · Within weeks

Open Questions

  • What will be the long-term impact of Trump's primary endorsements on the Republican party's general election performance?
  • Will defeated Republicans seek revenge or retire quietly?
  • How will the Senate function with an increasing number of Republicans leaving or being ousted?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by BBC News.

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