The Republicans’ Senate primary in Indiana is one of the most contentious in the country this year, but Rep. Todd Rokita (R) believes he knows how to win the GOP nomination: by celebrating his unyielding support for Donald Trump.
In his new television ad, the Indiana congressman literally puts on a red “Make America Great Again” cap and vows to “proudly stand with” the president — more than his primary rivals.
About a thousand miles to the west, Rep. Kevin Cramer (R), who’s taking on Sen. Heidi Heitkamp (D), went a little further, telling a conservative radio host this week that he sees voting against Trump’s wishes as being comparable to adultery. CNN reported yesterday:
“Here’s the good news about Donald Trump: Most of the time, he’s for North Dakota, and that’s my point where I’ve heard her say, ‘Gee, I voted with him 55% of the time,’” Cramer said.
“Can you imagine going home and telling your wife, ‘I’ve been faithful to you 55% of the time’?”
The GOP lawmaker has occasionally made some strange comments — Cramer had some curious criticisms of women’s clothing last year, for example — but this week’s quote was a doozy.
It does, however, reflect an increasingly common view in Republican politics: Trump may be unpopular; he may be plagued by scandal; his White House may be flailing; he may be the subject of an ongoing criminal investigation; and his administration may be burdened by widespread corruption allegations; but ambitious GOP politicians believe the key to their success is to cozy up to the president in the most sycophantic ways possible.
This is happening in races nationwide. In Michigan, for example, Lt. Gov. Brian Calley (R) two years ago called on Trump to quit the presidential race after the “Access Hollywood” recording showed Trump bragging about sexual assault. Now that Calley is running for governor, his GOP primary rival, Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette (R) is using the incident in an attack ad.









