The Republican Party already has a fight on its hands for the 2028 election as a core voter group looks set to abandon the party.
Analysts warned the GOP that their security ahead of the next presidential election is unsure at best, with a major demographic set to drop out of voting for either party. While it may be unlikely that the Democratic Party sees a rise in voting numbers, it does mean the GOP will see a reduction in theirs, according to Hanna Rosin and Elaine Godfrey.
The pair, speaking for The Atlantic, suggested the podcast figureheads who backed Donald Trump at the 2024 election will abandon the party entirely by the next presidential election.
Godfrey explained, "No one thinks that the people who voted for Trump in 2024 are gonna be so p---ed, they vote Democrat, at least not en masse. The risk is they’re gonna stay home. They’re gonna be like, 'You know what? Whatever. This guy’s, just like all the other politicians. He’s lied so many times. Now we’re in another war.' They’re frustrated; they’re gonna stay at home."
"You have so many voices in his coalition saying, 'We’re disappointed in Trump. He’s betrayed us.' That isn’t gonna get people out to vote. It’s not gonna get people out to volunteer. So I think what could have been a pretty bad year for Republicans might be an absolute disaster for Republicans, thanks to this."
Godfrey went on to suggest even the wider MAGA portions of Trump and the GOP's support could be missing come the next presidential election.
"So the nonideological podcast guys and the hardcore MAGA guys—and women—have that in common," she explained. "So what you’ll see is different candidates trying to pick up this sort of fallen mantle of Trumpism and sort of take it to its conclusion, right?
"And that could mean different things, but I think there’s an opening now for someone to call themselves MAGA, call themselves a Trumpist, but actually not want to go to war with Iran and sort of truly be 'America First,' right — cut off funding to Ukraine, for example, and be also a fiscal conservative. I think there’s a lot of room there for someone to do that.
"Now, I think it’s really hard, at the same time, because if you’re gonna do that and win, I think you have to be charismatic. You have to sort of have the kind of juice that Trump has, which has allowed him to unite this complicated coalition. I don’t know that anyone has that at this point."