Home United States USA — Political Fox News demanded a government shutdown — and got one

Fox News demanded a government shutdown — and got one

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A lot of conservatives with big platforms were very, very angry at Trump this week.
If the government shuts down tonight over President Donald Trump’s demand for $5 billion for a border wall, feel free to blame conservative punditry.
This week Ann Coulter described Trump as a gutless “sociopath” who, without a border wall, “will just have been a joke presidency who scammed the American people.”
Radio host Rush Limbaugh said on his show Wednesday that without the $5 billion, any signing of a budget stop gap would show “Trump gets nothing and the Democrats get everything.”
Fox & Friends co-host Steve Doocy said that without wall funding, “the swamp wins,” adding that Trump will “look like a loser” without wall funding and stating, “This is worth shutting down” the government.
There’s no way around it: A lot of people on the right are very upset with Trump (and each other) right now. And they’re taking it out on the president — on his favorite television network, on talk radio, on podcasts, and online — and it’s worked to put the pressure on him. Trump has abruptly changed course to demand $5 billion for a border wall (a demand the Senate isn’t likely to give in to). And now the government is facing a “very long” shutdown.
In the words of Sen. Bob Corker (R-TN), referring to Coulter and Limbaugh, “We have two talk-radio show hosts who basically influenced the president, and we’re in a shutdown mode. It’s just—that’s tyranny, isn’t it?”
The Republican Party of 2018 contains a myriad of factions, from isolationist paleoconservatives to “conservatarians” with libertarian leanings to foreign policy hawks to the deeply socially conservative. Yet since Trump’s GOP nomination in 2016, he has enjoyed fairly unanimous, if not always enthusiastic, support from a majority of the GOP’s most prominent faces, both in conservative media and in Congress.
Republican voters are still solidly behind Trump (his approval rating among Republicans polled by Gallup is at 86 percent). But the voices of the party who, unlike some portions of Trump’s base, supported Trump because of what he could do as president rather than who he is as president are deeply displeased with him.
Some on the right are upset about the administration’s decision to pull out of Syria and, perhaps, Afghanistan — and are very worried by news of James Mattis’s resignation from his role as defense secretary.

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