Trump gets his man in Texas. The Republicans could be the losers - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
FT商学院
Trump gets his man in Texas. The Republicans could be the losers

By favouring a divisive candidate, the president may have put the Senate in play

00:00

{"text":[[{"start":11.05,"text":"Donald Trump was visibly satisfied when a long-serving Republican senator was ousted in a Texas primary this week."}],[{"start":18.8,"text":"At a time when the president’s national approval ratings are falling, the overwhelming defeat of Senator John Cornyn at the hands of a Maga loyalist demonstrated Trump’s tightening grip over his party. "}],[{"start":31.5,"text":"But such successes may also contribute to bigger problems at a more consequential vote — the November 3 midterm elections, when the future of Trump’s legislative agenda and much more will be at stake."}],[{"start":42.55,"text":"“Last night was incredible, not only Texas but so many other places,” Trump marvelled after Cornyn, a traditional Republican who has only barely been out of step with him, was beaten by Ken Paxton, the state’s scandal-ridden attorney-general."}],[{"start":58.55,"text":"“The numbers were fantastic,” Trump added during a televised cabinet meeting at the White House on Wednesday. “Last night was very, very powerful.”"}],[{"start":68,"text":"In recent months surging petrol prices and the Iran war have cast clouds over his second term in office and triggered widespread anxiety among Republicans. "}],[{"start":null,"text":"

"}],[{"start":77.4,"text":"Even so, Trump has mobilised his base to crush the political careers of Republican politicians who have stood in his way or have, like Cornyn, just sometimes failed to fall in line."}],[{"start":89.2,"text":"Despite holding the Texas Senate seat since 2002, Cornyn lost the primary by 28 points to Paxton, a sign of the president’s sheer sway over his party’s grassroots."}],[{"start":101,"text":"Trump’s loyalists in primary contests across the country have also ousted internal critics such as Thomas Massie, a member of the House of Representatives from Kentucky, and Bill Cassidy, a Louisiana senator. Any whiff of dissent risks being fatal for Republican lawmakers."}],[{"start":117.75,"text":"But the president’s victories might yet prove pyrrhic — particularly in Texas, the state that could decide control of the US Senate."}],[{"start":125.5,"text":"A few months ago, the idea that the Republicans could lose either Texas or the Senate as a whole would have seemed far-fetched."}],[{"start":132.1,"text":"But, with Paxton’s detractors denouncing him as a flawed, extreme candidate, the Democrats now see an opening to win a Texas Senate seat for the first time in nearly 40 years."}],[{"start":142.7,"text":"Trump’s unpopularity is already expected to help the Democrats take control of the House, according to non-partisan analysts, such as the Cook Political Report. The prediction market Kalshi attributes a roughly three-quarters probability to a Democratic majority in the lower chamber."}],[{"start":158.5,"text":"The loss of the Senate would be far more humbling for the president and a greater blow to the rest of his White House tenure, making it much more difficult for him to pass legislation and confirm nominees to top jobs. It would also expose him to further congressional scrutiny and investigations into his administration. "}],[{"start":177.4,"text":"Such a defeat would be a stunning rebuke for a president who has sought to remake the US government in his mould and has greatly expanded his executive powers in the first year after his return to office."}],[{"start":null,"text":"
Sen. John Cornyn stands at a podium looking down, appearing somber, with two women in the background.
"}],[{"start":189.1,"text":"“I would not put a lot of money on the president having a successful midterm election at this point,” says Jeffrey Engel, director of the Center for Presidential History at Southern Methodist University near Dallas."}],[{"start":201.1,"text":"“I’m sure [Trump] woke up this week thinking ‘I won’, in the same way that Napoleon woke up on the first day of the Russian invasion,” Engel adds, in a reference to the 19th-century French leader’s ill-fated military campaign against Moscow."}],[{"start":215.54999999999998,"text":"The White House and Republicans close to Trump still project confidence that they can limit the damage in November, retaining their majorities on Capitol Hill. They dismiss the chances that Paxton will be defeated in November by James Talarico, his 37-year-old Democratic rival. "}],[{"start":232.7,"text":"“I think [Trump] believes that Texas is going to be red, period,” says one Republican senator, referring to the colour of the president’s party. "}],[{"start":240.75,"text":"“Are Republicans going to have to spend more money to get Paxton elected? Yes,” adds David Urban, a Republican consultant at Washington-based lobbying group BGR. "}],[{"start":251.8,"text":"“But is Texas going to continue to have a Republican senator? I’m sure of that,” he adds."}],[{"start":258.40000000000003,"text":"Top White House officials including chief of staff Susie Wiles maintain that Trump’s involvement in the midterms will drive turnout in an election in which Republican enthusiasm might otherwise be subdued."}],[{"start":269.90000000000003,"text":"“President Trump is the unquestioned leader of the Republican Party and his endorsement is the most powerful endorsement in the history of American politics — look no further than his perfect record in the past year for proof,” the White House said this week."}],[{"start":285.15000000000003,"text":"In any case, Trump’s moves to punish his Republican critics and back more divisive candidates in their place have reinforced the notion that the midterm elections will be a referendum on the president himself."}],[{"start":296.75000000000006,"text":"“The more that he makes himself and his impulses the animating theme of the election, the harder it is for the focus to be anything other than Trump,” Amy Walter, the editor-in-chief of the Cook Political Report, wrote this month. "}],[{"start":310.55000000000007,"text":"Texas Democrats start to hope"}],[{"start":313.1000000000001,"text":"At a rally in Houston on Wednesday night, Democrats were buoyant about their prospects in Texas."}],[{"start":319.1500000000001,"text":"“Ken Paxton is the most corrupt politician in America and he belongs nowhere close to the United States Senate,” said Talarico, a former teacher who is studying to become a Presbyterian minister and who dressed for the occasion in a dark blazer, jeans and brown cowboy boots. "}],[{"start":335.6500000000001,"text":"Paxton, one of the loudest supporters of Trump’s bid to overturn the 2020 presidential election, was impeached in 2023 by the Republican-controlled Texas state legislature on charges of bribery, abuse of office and corruption. "}],[{"start":350.3500000000001,"text":"He is also about to be embroiled in a divorce trial after his estranged wife announced she was filing to end their marriage “on biblical grounds”."}],[{"start":358.1500000000001,"text":"Paxton has denied wrongdoing and said last year that he had been the victim of a “bogus witch-hunt” after the Department of Justice dropped a probe into abuse of office and bribery allegations."}],[{"start":370.30000000000007,"text":"The controversies around his Republican opponent have helped Talarico to a narrow polling lead — 1.5 percentage points in a head-to-head match-up, according to the RealClearPolitics polling average."}],[{"start":null,"text":"
James Talarico poses with a supporter holding a “Take Back Texas” sign as another person takes their photo at a rally.
"}],[{"start":381.55000000000007,"text":"“My biggest thing is having a decent human being to represent Texas,” said Laura Hiers, a 55-year-old physical therapist at Wednesday night’s rally, who added that she has known Talarico since he spoke in her church two years ago."}],[{"start":395.25000000000006,"text":"But Democrats’ hopes have long fallen short in Texas, which Trump won by a 14-point margin over Kamala Harris in 2024. The only Democrat to come close in recent years was former congressman Beto O’Rourke, who came within three points of defeating Republican incumbent senator Ted Cruz back in 2018. "}],[{"start":416.25000000000006,"text":"As soon as Paxton won Tuesday’s primary, he and his allies rushed to attack Talarico as too far to the left for Texas. Buoyed by the margin of their victory over Cornyn, they maintain they will overcome any doubts once their campaign against the Democrat cranks up in the conservative state. "}],[{"start":433.25000000000006,"text":"This week the Paxton campaign released an advert with clips of past comments by Talarico, including claims that there were six “biological sexes”, that the American flag is a “complicated symbol” and that the US-Mexico border “should [have] a giant welcome mat out front”. "}],[{"start":449.20000000000005,"text":"“There is absolutely no way Texas will elect James Talarico, a BBQ-hating vegan who believes God is non-binary,” Joe Gruters, chair of the Republican National Committee, wrote on X. “Full stop.”"}],[{"start":462.40000000000003,"text":"The race for control of the Senate"}],[{"start":464.8,"text":"In Washington, Senate majority leader John Thune spent months trying to convince Trump to back Cornyn. He warned the president that Paxton’s candidacy would jeopardise Republicans’ hold of the Texas seat and the Senate itself."}],[{"start":477.45,"text":"Instead, Trump made an eleventh-hour endorsement of Paxton last week. “None of us control what the president does,” Thune said afterwards."}],[{"start":486.75,"text":"Thune nevertheless rallied round after this week’s primary, appealing to donors to write big cheques for Paxton and other candidates to keep control of the upper house. “Losing is not an option when it comes to the state of Texas,” he said."}],[{"start":499.9,"text":"Until now, Paxton has struggled to raise funds in support of his candidacy. Federal Electoral Commission filings and advertising spending data show that he was vastly outspent by Cornyn in the primary. "}],[{"start":513.3,"text":"That contrasts with Trump’s claims of a political war chest of as much as $1.4bn. Maga Inc, the president’s Super Pac — a fundraising vehicle that can raise unlimited amounts of money — has nearly $350mn cash on hand, according to the FEC filings."}],[{"start":531.5,"text":"But it remains unclear how much Maga Inc — or any other part of the president’s political apparatus — will be willing to spend in support of Republican candidates heading into November."}],[{"start":null,"text":"
Ken Paxton waves while stepping onto a stage between US and Texas flags at a runoff election night event.
"}],[{"start":543.5,"text":"“I think he will spend some money. He will never spend all of that money,” says one Republican senator. “The president is a personal guy. Personal affection means a lot to him. I think it determines how he spends money as well.” "}],[{"start":555.55,"text":"Republicans currently control the US Senate, 53-47, meaning they cannot afford a net loss of more than three seats in November if they are to maintain control of the chamber. (In the event of a 50-50 tie, Vice-President JD Vance would have a casting vote.)"}],[{"start":572.1999999999999,"text":"One of the biggest challenges for the party is to hold on to Maine, where incumbent Susan Collins has defied the polls in past elections, but is running behind Graham Platner, a well-funded Democrat. An oyster farmer and military veteran, he has galvanised the party’s base but has been hit by scandal over a Nazi-related skull-and-crossbones tattoo, as well as controversial social media posts."}],[{"start":595.5999999999999,"text":"Democrats also spy opportunities in North Carolina, Alaska and Ohio."}],[{"start":600.9999999999999,"text":"If the party took all four seats, they would gain control of the Senate; if they faltered in one, Texas could put them over the edge."}],[{"start":608.7999999999998,"text":"In the meantime, according to Kalshi, the Republicans have fallen since the beginning of the year from a roughly two-thirds chance of retaining the chamber to around 55:45."}],[{"start":null,"text":"
"}],[{"start":618.8499999999998,"text":"But even beyond his move to champion Paxton in Texas, Trump is not making life easy for Republicans."}],[{"start":625.3999999999997,"text":"In January, he attacked five of his own party’s senators, including Collins, saying they “should never be elected again” for opposing a war powers resolution."}],[{"start":635.2499999999998,"text":"His effort to set up a $1.8bn “antiweaponisation” fund to help allies who claim they were wrongly investigated or convicted by Joe Biden’s administration — notably for involvement in the January 6 2021 attack on the US Capitol — ran into a wall of outrage among Republican senators before being temporarily blocked by a judge late this week."}],[{"start":656.7999999999997,"text":"And during Wednesday’s cabinet meeting Trump insisted he would not seek a quick peace deal with Iran just to help his party domestically. "}],[{"start":665.0999999999997,"text":"“I don’t care about the midterms,” the president said, just a couple of weeks after causing a furore by declaring he did not “think about Americans’ financial situation” during negotiations over Tehran’s nuclear programme."}],[{"start":677.7499999999997,"text":"In Texas and beyond, some Republicans fear Trump has been engaging in political malpractice against his own party’s prospects. "}],[{"start":687.4999999999997,"text":"But in many ways his emphasis on his movement, rather than his party, has been a constant feature of Trump’s approach to politics. "}],[{"start":695.0999999999997,"text":"“He looks at each individual case through his own personal lens,” says Engel at the Center for Presidential History."}],[{"start":701.5499999999997,"text":"“When he can run as the angry man it appeals but when people have recent and current evidence of his leadership they tend to reject it,” Engel adds. “Trump is much more popular as a critic than a president.”"}],[{"start":721.6999999999998,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftcn.net.cn/album/a_1780142755_5159.mp3"}

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

Lex专栏:锡——从罐头材料变身AI热潮关键金属

锡价上涨正促使一些矿商押注于这种看起来极为平常的金属,重新开始采掘工作。

“飞机不能空着飞”:航空公司为“寒冬”做准备

在担忧航空煤油价格持续高企的阴影下,航空业在巴西召开年度大会。

澳大利亚试图解决住房危机

澳大利亚总理阿尔巴尼斯正试图扭转延续数十年的税收激励措施,让年轻人买得起房。

美联储将不得不重新审视其全球角色

美国央行在帮助稳定他国的财政状况时,作出的不仅是经济决策,同时也是外交决策。

“先租后付”贷款瞄准居住成本重压下的美国人

在住房负担能力危机加剧之际,短期融资需求正在向租赁市场扩张。

在数据中心抢建狂潮中,AI“卖铲人”赚得盆满钵满

卡特彼勒与豪赫蒂夫等老牌工业股告别沉闷,在AI 热潮推动下迎来大涨。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×