Donald Trump embraces his role in GOP

ST. LOUIS — A growing divide has emerged in the Republican Party’s unruly presidential contest, as the race bid farewell to a once-powerful White House contender. On one side stands billionaire businessman Donald Trump and his allies, on the other are those who oppose him.

A day after Rick Perry, Texas’ longest-serving governor, ended his second Republican presidential run with a whimper, Trump marked the shake-up by embracing his role as his party’s 2016 bully Saturday.

“Mr. Perry, he’s gone. Good luck. He was very nasty to me,” Trump told Iowa voters. In an interview earlier, he touted his tough-talking style as a plus. “It’s an attitude that our country needs. We get pushed around by everybody,” he said, adding, “We have to push back.”

Perry had all but declared war on the billionaire businessman in July, calling Trump “a cancer on conservatism” who could destroy the Republican Party. On Saturday, Trump’s campaign was soaring while Perry’s White House ambitions were dead. And with the real estate mogul suffocating the rest of the packed field, it’s only a matter of time before he helps push another GOP candidate out of the race.

Perry was a leading voice in the anti-Trump movement, a group that has suffered in the polls as Trump’s public allies largely avoid backlash from the anti-insider wave that made Trump the unlikeliest of Republican presidential front-runners.

Republican officials and donors alike are left in a state of confusion about Trump’s remarkable staying power despite his repeated gaffes and inexperience on key issues.

“There is no play in the playbook for where we are right now,” said John Jordan, a California winery owner and major Republican fundraiser. “Donors don’t know what to think. Nobody saw the Trump phenomenon coming.”

In still-early polls, the real-estate mogul and reality TV star has more support than the once-top-tier trio of former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio combined. In second, by the way, is another political rookie: Ben Carson, a retired surgeon who repeatedly refused to criticize Trump in recent days.

Bush has gone the other way in recent weeks, jabbing the businessman repeatedly on the campaign trail and through social media. He was at it again Saturday while meeting with supporters in Miami.

“Mr. Trump says that I can’t speak Spanish,” Bush told the crowd in Spanish. “Pobrecito (poor guy).”

Walker, another Trump critic, has also struggled recently, particularly in Iowa, where he was considered a front-runner for much of the year. The Wisconsin governor canceled upcoming appearances in California and Michigan to focus instead on the critical early voting Iowa and South Carolina.

“Nothing changed for us aside from some scheduling,” Walker spokeswoman Kirsten Kukowski said, dismissing any suggestion the campaign was concerned.

On the other end of the spectrum, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, perhaps Trump’s biggest ally, declined to address the Trump effect on Perry’s exit Saturday.

“I recognize that the media enjoys seeing Republicans bicker back and forth with each other and throw rocks at each other. But I think the American people could not care less,” Cruz said after addressing the same gathering of social conservatives in St. Louis that Perry shocked the night before with his announcement.

A tea party favorite, Cruz has declined to seize on Trump’s positions that would normally trigger conservative ire.

Trump favors tax increases on the rich, once supported abortion rights, gave money to Hillary Clinton and said kind things about government-run health care in other countries.

Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, among Trump’s chief critics, wondered aloud what is happening to his party: “What does it say about GOP when a 3 &half term Gov w/ a successful record of creating jobs bows out as a reality star leads in the polls?” Paul tweeted shortly after Perry’s departure.

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