Donald Trump's MAGA voter base has become "jaded" with his handling of several key issues, with a new analysis from Australia's ABC News predicting that "more fights are brewing" due to these divides.
In his analysis, ABC's Washington, D.C., correspondent Brad Ryan highlighted the Epstein files disclosure scandals as one of the biggest and loudest issue dividing the MAGA base, which has long been in support of a complete release of all government materials pertaining to the notorious sex trafficker. Trump himself pledged to release the files on the 2024 campaign trail, but later did much to block them once he returned to the White House.
Citing a quote from former Trump ally Marjorie Taylor Greene, Ryan's report noted that the MAGA "base is jaded" with Trump, and highlighted six major dividing lines.
Firstly, Trump has seen major pushback from the likes of Greene, Tucker Carlson and Steve Bannon over the country's continued support of Israel and its war in Gaza under his leadership, with Greene calling the mass death of Palestinians a "genocide" and Carlson saying the notion that these deaths were unintentional is a "lie." Ryan cited recent polling to suggest that younger Republicans are increasingly against US support of Israel. The Chicago Council of Global Affairs in October found that 27 percent of Gen Z Republicans think the US has given too much aid to Israel, compared to 16 percent of older Republicans who said the same.
MAGA media figures have also recently become bitterly divided over the embrace from some in the movement of Nick Fuentes, an avowed white supremacist with a history of complimentary comments about Adolf Hitler. Carlson recently interviewed Fuentes on his internet show, prompting backlash from the likes of Sen. Ted Cruz and DailyWire's Ben Shapiro, the latter of whom called Fuentes a "super-spreader of vile ideas."
Republicans in Congress have also been resistant and slow to address the impending end of Affordable Care Act subsidies, which will see premiums for marketplace health insurance skyrocket in the new year without intervention. Moderate GOP members of Congress have demanded an extension of the subsidies, worrying that the prices going up could spell disaster for them in the 2026 midterms, while more staunchly conservative members remain opposed.
The fourth issue Ryan highlighted was H1-B visas for skilled foreign workers, which Trump and his allies have sought to curtail during his second term. The late Charlie Kirk called the visas a "scam," and many other MAGA supporters view them as taking jobs away from Americans. Other supporters, however, were outraged at Trump's moves against H1-Bs, with conservative radio host Erick Erickson saying it was the "very first time I have seen so many people who have long been supporters of the president furious with the president."
Speaking of Kirk, Ryan also highlighted the conspiracies surrounding the Turning Point USA founder's death as another wedge driving MAGA apart. Many of these theories have been driven by commentator Candace Owens, who has frequently suggested that Kirk's shooting was orchestrated by the Israeli or French governments, or other figures within Turning Point.
Lastly, Ryan highlighted the cost-of-living crisis in the US, the issue often cited as the biggest on the minds of voters heading into the 2026 midterms. Trump campaigned on lowering everyday prices, but as conditions have worsened or remained the same under his leadership, he has become increasingly dismissive of these concerns, claiming that "affordability" is a "hoax" perpetuated against him by Democrats. Meanwhile, Democrats campaigning largely on addressing the cost of living have seen major electoral victories in the 2025 off-year elections.