President Trump stayed undefeated with his endorsements after Tuesday’s primaries, which also saw the defeat of Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) in his primary. Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA) was ousted last weekend—he’ll be searching for a new job soon. And prior to that, there were a few anti-redistricting Republicans in Indiana. It’s a revenge tour—cross the president, and you’re gone. We’re no longer tolerating the panicked scum within our ranks. And, of course, Cassidy, being a sourpuss, voted with Democrats on their absurd War Powers resolution regarding Operation Epic Fury this week.
So, everyone is freaking out. Good. Fear is a very powerful motivator. However, the consequences cannot be ignored; it’s possible that Cassidy and, soon, John Cornyn could become major nuisances. For now, Trump is done with Senate Republican games, especially John Thune. The man cannot close (via Axios):
Thune (R-S.D.) called it Trump's "decision." But it's Thune's problem to pass Trump's agenda, with a trio of senators the president can no longer hurt.
Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) has been unbowed since announcing his retirement in July 2025 after clashes with Trump.
Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) voted with Democrats Wednesday to advance an Iran war powers vote to debate.
Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) has a runoff May 26 but will enter it with Trump backing someone else.
Adding to Thune's degree of difficulty: a president sick of the Senate and its rules, and rank-and-file Republicans seething over Trump's knifing of Cornyn.
"I don't understand. He [Paxton] is an ethically challenged individual," said Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine).
"I'm supremely disappointed," Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) said.
Driving the news: Trump's endorsement of Paxton came in the middle of his 10-day GOP revenge tour.
Cassidy fell Saturday, failing to make the runoff in Louisiana's Senate primary.
"Horrible Congressman Thomas Massie" (R-Ky.), as the president called him, lost his primary Tuesday to the Trump-endorsed Ed Gallrein.
Between the lines: The race will now be "three times more expensive" for Republicans to hold, said Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), referencing Democratic nominee James Talarico setting Texas-sized fundraising records.
A Thune ally told Axios: "Republicans may keep Texas, but you broke-it-you-buy-it. MAGA Inc. just became Texas Inc."
What we're watching: The $72 billion reconciliation package will be the first test for the Senate's newly combustible environment.
That last part will be a test: the reconciliation package had to be reworked since the Senate Parliamentarian, who’s also a former Harry Reid aide, struck down some provisions. And that was before the panican caucus in the Senate gained a few members.
We needed to gut the rot. There will be costs, but hopefully only temporary.