The Atlantic

Republican Senators Want No Part of Trump-Corker Feud

Senator Bob Corker drew little support from his party a day after unloading on the president. But neither did the commander-in-chief.
Source: Jacquelyn Martin / AP

Updated on October 10 at 4:30 p.m. ET

If Senator Bob Corker was hoping his blunt criticism of President Trump would inspire his fellow Republicans to join him in publicly confronting the leader of their party, he would be disappointed. And if the president was hoping that a chorus of GOP legislators would rise to his defense, he, too, should be dismayed.

With their shrugs and with their silence, Republican senators responded to the Trump-Corker feud with a resounding plea: Keep us out of it. Few elected Republicans chose to take sides between the president and the powerful chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee who Trump’s White House to “an adult day care” and that his reckless stewardship was leading the U.S. “on the path to World War III.” By and large, they used the Columbus Day holiday and the start of a weeklong Senate recess to avoid the latest and perhaps most flagrant example of Trump’s deteriorating relationship with the Republican establishment.

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