Another factor in the Democrats' midterm victories was arguably former President Trump and how a number of his endorsed candidates lost their elections. Herschel Walker's loss in Georgia's Senate runoff earlier this week has led a number of Republicans to blame the former president for the party's losses this midterm cycle.
But The Hill's Alexander Bolton reports divisions remain among Republicans about the role Trump played this campaign cycle.
"Whether we talk about it or not, Trump was going to be a factor and [for] a lot of the folks that he endorsed he insisted the predicate for that endorsement be that the 2020 election was stolen and that's a losing argument," said Senate Republican Whip John Thune.
On the other hand, Trump ally Sen. Lindsey Graham says the argument that Trump brought down Republicans in the midterms is overblown.
"That analysis makes sense in some places, not in others — not in Georgia," Graham said, pointing out that Biden beat Trump by roughly 12,000 votes in Georgia in 2020.
Graham instead said that Republicans need to put their energy into improving their strategy on early voting.
"Structurally, we've got a problem in several states. [Democrats] get too far ahead in early voting. We got to fix that and they're outspending us three and four to one," Graham said.
Trump has been grappling with a slew of negative headlines since announcing his third presidential bid, including his legal troubles, endorsed candidates' losses, meeting with known Holocaust denier and white supremacist Nick Fuentes at Mar-a-Lago, and saying he wants to terminate parts of the Constitution.
And polling shows that the headlines and scandals he's embroiled in could be dragging down his presidential bid. According to a new Yahoo News-YouGov poll, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis leads Trump 47 to 42 percent among registered voters in a hypothetical matchup.
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