If Indiana Republican senators had any doubt about what to do with President Donald Trump's redistricting proposal, he helped them make up their minds the night before this week's vote.
In a social media screed, Trump accused the state's top senator of being ''a bad guy, or a very stupid one."
''That kind of language doesn't help,'' said Sen. Travis Holdman, a banker and lawyer from near Fort Wayne who voted against the plan.
He was among 21 Republican senators who dealt Trump one of the most significant political defeats of his second term by rejecting redistricting in Indiana. The decision undermined the president's national campaign to redraw congressional maps to boost his party's chances in the upcoming midterm elections.
In interviews after Thursday's vote, several Republican senators said they were leaning against the plan from the start because their constituents didn't like it. But in a Midwest nice rebuttal to America's increasingly coarse political discourse, some said they simply didn't like the president's tone, like when he called senators ''suckers.''
''I mean, that's pretty nasty,'' said Sen. Jean Leising, a farm owner from Oldenburg who works at her daughter's travel agency.
Trump didn't seem to get the message. Asked about the vote, the president once again took aim at Indiana's top senator, Rodric Bray.
''He'll probably lose his next primary, whenever that is," Trump said. "I hope he does, because he's done a tremendous disservice.''