The GOP’s winding path to unification around Donald Trump has had the collateral damage of muddling Democrats’ message as they try to settle on a playbook to go after the GOP’s presumptive presidential nominee.
Is the Republican Party doomed because it’s hopelessly dis-unified, with Republican leaders keeping their distance from Trump? Or is it doomed because it’s running towards Trump and embracing him? Democrats aren’t sure.
Trump emerged from his meeting with House Speaker Paul Ryan Thursday without an endorsement, but with a statement saying the two leaders had “few differences.”
That left Democrats advancing two different narratives, each in tension with the other.
The campaign of Hillary Clinton emphasized the non-endorsement.
They quickly added Ryan’s name to a long list of others in the “chorus of Republicans and conservative commentators from around the country rejecting his unpredictable, risky and divisive candidacy.” The list includes Republican elected officials and conservative thought leaders, some whom are also featured in a video the campaign produced of Republicans distancing themselves from Trump and criticizing the nominee.
The message: Donald Trump is so terrible, even Republican leaders want nothing to do with him.
RELATED: What the conservative movement wants from Donald Trump
Meanwhile, Democrats in Congress took a different tact.
Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid took to the Senate floor to say Republicans had “fully embraced” Trump. “The Republican leadership in both houses are marching in lockstep with Donald Trump,” Reid said. “Donald Trump is everything that the Republican leader and his party could ever want in a nomination. Trump’s policy positions are identical to the Republican Party platform.”
At a press conference in the Senate after Trump’s meeting on Capitol Hill, Democrats displayed a poster listing “policies Trump and Senate GOP already agree on.”
“Donald Trump and Republicans are singing from the same hymnal,” said New York Sen. Chuck Schumer, who is set to takeover for Reid next year.
The message: The Republican Party is so terrible, they’re throwing in their lot with Donald Trump.
Privately, some Democrats have griped about the party’s scattershot angle on the real estate mogul.
RELATED: Meet the Republican leaders standing up against Trump
The difference in emphasis speaks to a difference in goals. Clinton is trying to beat Trump, while Reid and his colleagues are trying to beat Republicans down the ballot and tarnish the GOP brand as a whole. On one hand, stoking disagreements between Trump and the GOP may make independent and even some Republican voters feel more comfortable voting for Clinton. On the other hand, it risks giving Republicans the appearance of independence from Trump.









