Based on the latest dreadful poll numbers for Donald Trump, it appears that his once-diehard MAGA base might be splitting at the seams like Trump’s cankle-filledBased on the latest dreadful poll numbers for Donald Trump, it appears that his once-diehard MAGA base might be splitting at the seams like Trump’s cankle-filled

Trump conned his MAGA base — and lost the GOP to this lunatic

2026/05/06 19:01
5 min read
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Based on the latest dreadful poll numbers for Donald Trump, it appears that his once-diehard MAGA base might be splitting at the seams like Trump’s cankle-filled socks.

Trump is hanging by a thread as the untouchable golden idol of the red-hatted MAGA devotees, but that gold aura now only exists in his gauche Oval Office. He has spent much of the second year of his second term reneging on his “Make America Great Again” agenda.

Trump conned his MAGA base — and lost the GOP to this lunatic

He is in the throes of betraying the promises that got him elected. No new wars that go on forever? There’s one in Iran that shows no signs of stopping. Gas prices under control? Tell that to the guy filling up his F-150 pickup truck that now costs an astonishing $160.

The Epstein files? Trump’s pushing all kinds of craziness on Truth Social so those files get buried. Bringing down inflation? Ha. The joke’s on you, MAGA, and they’re beginning to realize it.

Trump’s poll numbers are slipping fast. He has alienated parts of his own coalition. Democrats are overperforming in special elections by margins not seen in years. A majority of Americans, including a notable share of Republicans, now say he’s not mentally fit to serve.

And yet he keeps escalating, seemingly indifferent to the damage he’s leaving behind, and detached from what comes after him.

If that’s the case, there needs to be a serious reckoning about the survivability of MAGA, because the signs point to ruin.

Look at what’s happening to Turning Point USA, the youth army that Charlie Kirk built into one of conservatism’s most powerful organizing machines. After Kirk’s assassination last September, the organization has struggled to hold itself together. When Vice President JD Vance headlined a recent event in Athens, Georgia, in a venue built for thousands, the crowd was a fraction of capacity.

Erika Kirk, who took over as CEO after her husband’s death, has overseen sweeping layoffs, with more than 60 staffers cut in what insiders described as a purge. Turning Point may be a canary in the coal mine for institutions built to sustain MAGA that are now showing signs of fracture.

That may be a preview of what’s coming to MAGA itself.

The question is whether this discontent can coalesce into something meaningful before 2028. And when you look at the roster of potential successors, the answer should worry Republican strategists.

JD Vance? The base has never fully embraced him. He feels more like an imposter when it comes to speaking the language of MAGA. He shares one quality with Trump, egomania. But to the base, Trump’s is playful, while Vance’s is irritating.

Marco Rubio? To the America First crowd, he remains tied to the establishment they spent a decade trying to tear down. If Vance is an imposter, Rubio is an affront. Even slurping up Trump’s Kool-Aid isn’t enough to quench MAGA’s thirst.

So who’s left?

Right now, there’s only one person who embodies Trump’s lunacy while espousing his original MAGA ethos, and that’s Marjorie Taylor Greene.

Greene began her congressional career as a fiercely loyal Trump ally. But tension emerged when Trump tried to sideline her, reportedly dismissing her chances of winning higher office.

She responded by doing something almost no one in Trump world would dare, she fought back. Greene escalated her criticism of his focus on foreign policy over domestic priorities and questioned his reluctance to release the Epstein documents.

She has openly suggested that she, not Trump, might better represent the “America First” agenda.

That was evident in her speech at the Ron Paul Institute over the weekend. She declared “MAGA is dead” and a “lie,” accused Trump of initiating an “unprovoked” war in Iran, and called his actions “evil.” She also alleged that Trump threatened her family after she pushed for the release of Epstein files and accused his administration of serving foreign interests.

Greene is positioning herself as someone willing to say what others won’t, channeling the same anti-elite anger that fueled Trump’s rise.

While Trump deflects or obfuscates on issues like Epstein or gas prices, Greene tears into them. She frames herself as aligned with the attitudes many in the movement feel. She is, in effect, out-MAGAing Trump.

Granted, her current political standing is weak. She has resigned from Congress. Her poll numbers in Georgia are poor, and in a traditional general election she would be a risky candidate at best.

But those numbers reflect the present moment, not necessarily the movement’s future. And the future may belong to whoever can still speak its emotionally anger-charged language. And given her history, no one does that more viscerally than Greene, especially when she feels wronged.

In that way, Greene, impulsive, combustible, unfiltered, still emulates Trump. Rubio and Vance could never do what Trump and Greene do and survive politically. Every wild outburst reinforces her image as someone unafraid of the system MAGA voters distrust.

If the next two years bring gridlock, investigations, or electoral setbacks, including the possibility of Democrats retaking Congress, that turmoil will only strengthen Greene. Every hearing, every subpoena, every stalled working-class initiative becomes evidence for her argument that the system is broken and only confrontation works.

And when the movement finally moves beyond Trump, it won’t choose the safest option. It will choose the figure who most convincingly channels its anger and affinity for the bizarre.

Marjorie Taylor Greene is a literal and figurative wild-card for 2028, and she clearly isn’t the most reasonable choice for Republicans.

However, right now? Well, she’s the obvious one.

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