WOODSTOCK, Ga. — Donald Trump opened May by lifting a trailing Senate candidate in Ohio to the Republican nomination, seemingly cementing the former president's kingmaker status before another possible White House run. He's ending the month, however, stinging from a string of defeats that suggest a diminishing stature.
Trump faced a series of setbacks in Tuesday's primary elections as voters rejected his efforts to unseat two top targets for retribution: Georgia's Republican governor and secretary of state, both of whom rebuffed Trump's extraordinary pressure to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election. But the magnitude of defeat in the governor's race — more than 50 percentage points — was especially stunning and raised questions about whether Republican voters are beginning to move on from Trump.
Nearly seven years after the onetime reality television star launched what seemed to be an improbable campaign for the White House, the "Make America Great Again" movement Trump helmed isn't going anywhere. But voters are increasingly vocal in saying that the party's future is about more than Trump.
"I like Trump a lot, but Trump is in the past," said David Butler of Woodstock, Georgia, who voted for Gov. Brian Kemp on Tuesday and said Trump's endorsements had "no" impact "whatsoever" on his thinking.
It was the same for Will Parbhoo, a 22-year-old dental assistant who also voted for Kemp.
"I'm not really a Trumper," he said after voting. "I didn't like him to begin with. With all the election stuff, I was like 'Dude, move on.'"
One thing Parbhoo liked about the current governor? "Kemp is focused on Georgia," he said.
Trump sought to play down the losses by his favored candidates, saying on his social media platform Wednesday that he had a "very big and successful evening of political Endorsements" and insisting some races "were not possible to win."