Conservatives Can’t Beat Democrats Until They Defeat The RINOs In Their Own Party First
Until conservatives root out the rot within their own party, the D.C. status quo will continue to remain the same.Donald Trump’s endorsement of Karrin Taylor Robson in December marked one of the most baffling moves of his political career. Still riding the momentum of his victory, Trump pre-emptively backed a known RINO for Arizona governor — nearly 19 months ahead of the 2026 primary. The endorsement fit a troubling pattern: early-cycle support for anti-Trump Republicans who hadn’t lifted a finger for the movement, while stronger MAGA candidates waited in the wings.
If Trump wants to deliver on his campaign promises, he needs to reassert deterrence against weak-kneed incumbents and withhold endorsements in open races until candidates prove themselves.
At some point, conservatives must face the hard truth: The swamp isn’t being drained. It’s getting refilled — with Trump’s help.
Arizona illustrates why MAGA must push back hard on Trump’s errant picks. Robson, a classic McCain Republican, publicly criticized Trump as recently as 2022. She ran directly against MAGA favorite Kari Lake in the 2022 gubernatorial primary. Maybe she could merit a reluctant nod in a general election, but nearly two years before the primary? With far better options available?
And indeed, better options emerged. Months later, Rep. Andy Biggs — one of the most conservative voices in Congress and a staunch Trump ally — entered the race. The Arizona drama had a partially satisfying resolution when Trump issued a dual endorsement. But dig deeper, and the story turns sour.
Top Trump political aides reportedly worked for Robson’s campaign, raising serious questions for the MAGA base. Their loyalty seemed to shift only after Robson refused to tout Trump’s endorsement in her campaign ads.
Which brings us to the million-dollar question: Why would Trump endorse candidates so subversive that they feel embarrassed to even mention his support?
The Robson episode is an outlier in one way: Most establishment Republicans eagerly shout Trump’s endorsement from the rooftops. Yet the deeper issue remains. Without MAGA intervention, Trump keeps handing out endorsements to RINOs or to early candidates tied to his political network — often at the expense of better, more loyal alternatives.
Some defenders claim Trump backs incumbents to push his agenda. That theory falls apart when so many of those same RINOs openly sabotage it.
Take Reps. Mike Lawler (R-N.Y.) and Jen Kiggans (R-Va.). Both received Trump’s endorsement while actively working against his legislative priorities — pushing green energy subsidies and obsessing over tax breaks for their donor class. These aren’t minor policy differences. These are full-spectrum RINO betrayals.
Trump wouldn’t dare endorse Chip Roy (R-Texas) for dissenting from the right, so why give cover to Republicans who consistently undermine his mandate from the left?
And don’t chalk this up to political necessity in purple districts. Trump routinely gives away the farm in safe red states, too.
Here's a list of Trump’s Senate endorsements this cycle, straight from Ballotpedia — and it’s not comforting.

You’d struggle to find a single conservative in this bunch. Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, Cindy Hyde-Smith of Mississippi, Pete Ricketts of Nebraska, and Jim Risch of Idaho all represent the globalist mindset that Trump’s base has spent years fighting. So why did Trump hand them early endorsements — before they even faced a challenge? What exactly is he getting in return?
Well, we know what his loyalty bought last cycle.
After Trump endorsed Mississippi’s other swamp creature, Roger Wicker, against a MAGA primary challenger in 2024, Wicker walked into the chairmanship of the Armed Services Committee — and now he’s stalling cuts to USAID. That roadblock has helped keep the DOGE rescissions package from reaching the president’s desk.
Wicker isn’t the only one. Several of Trump’s endorsees have publicly criticized his tariff agenda. Whether or not you agree with those tariffs, the pattern is telling. Trump only seems to call out Republicans who dissent from the right. Meanwhile, the ones who oppose him from the left collect endorsements that wipe out any hope of a MAGA primary.
Ten years into the MAGA movement, grassroots candidates still can’t gain traction — and Trump’s endorsements are a big part of the problem.
Instead of amplifying insurgent conservatives, Trump often plays air support for entrenched incumbents. He clears the field early, blasting apart any challenge before it forms. That’s how we ended up stuck with senators like Thom Tillis (N.C.) and Bill Cassidy (La.) — both from red states — who routinely block Trump’s nominees and undermine his priorities.
Trump endorsed both Tillis and Cassidy during the 2020 cycle, even as grassroots conservatives geared up to take them on. In fact, almost every red-state RINO in the Senate has received a Trump primary endorsement — some of them twice in just 10 years. That list includes Moore Capito, Graham, Hyde-Smith, and Wicker.
What’s worse than endorsing RINOs for Congress in red states? Endorsing RINOs for governor and state legislature.
Yes, Washington is broken. Even in the best years, Republicans struggle to muster anything more than a narrow RINO majority. But the real opportunity lies elsewhere. More than 20 states already lean Republican enough to build permanent conservative power — if we nominate actual conservatives who know how to use it.
The 2026 election cycle will feature governorships in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, and Wyoming, to name just a few. These races offer a chance to reset the Republican Party — state by state — with DeSantis-caliber fighters.
Instead, we’re slipping backward.
RELATED: Reconciliation or capitulation: Trump’s final go-for-broke play

Trump has already endorsed Rep. Byron Donalds for Florida governor — nearly two years before the election. In most red states, Donalds would look like an upgrade. But Florida isn’t most red states. Florida is the citadel of conservatism. It deserves a contested primary, not a coronation. Donalds hasn’t led the way DeSantis has — either nationally or in-state — so why clear the field this early? Why not at least wait and see whether DeSantis backs a candidate?
And don’t forget about the state legislatures.
Freedom Caucuses have made real gains in turning GOP supermajorities into something that matters. But in Texas, House Speaker Dustin Burrows cut a deal with Democrats to grab power — then torched the entire session. Conservative voters are eager to remove Burrows and the cronies who enabled him.
This is where Trump should be getting involved — endorsing against the establishment, not propping it up.
Instead, he’s doing the opposite.
Trump recently pledged to back Texas House Speaker Dustin Burrows and his entire entourage of RINO loyalists — just because they passed a watered-down school choice bill that also funneled another $10 billion into the state’s broken public-school bureaucracy.
The same pattern holds in Florida.
The House speaker there, Daniel Perez, has consistently blocked Governor Ron DeSantis’ agenda, including efforts to strengthen immigration enforcement — policies that are now a national model. Despite this, Perez cozied up to Byron Donalds. Donalds returned the favor, but refused to take sides in the Perez versus DeSantis clashes. He also ducked the fights against Amendments 3 and 4. So what exactly qualifies Donalds to become Trump’s handpicked candidate in the most important red state in America?
This new paradigm — where candidates secure Trump endorsements just by parroting his name — has allowed RINO governors and legislators to push corporatist policies while staying firmly in Trump’s good graces. They wrap themselves in the MAGA brand without lifting a finger to advance its agenda.
That’s not the movement we were promised.
At some point, conservatives must face the hard truth: The swamp isn’t being drained. It’s getting refilled — with Trump’s help. We can’t keep celebrating Trump’s total control of the GOP while hand-waving away the RINOs, as if they’re some separate, unaccountable force. Trump has the power to shape the party. He could use it to clean house.
Instead, he keeps using it to protect the establishment from grassroots primaries.
At the very least, he should withhold endorsements until candidates prove they can deliver on the campaign’s promises. Don’t hand out golden Trump cards before they’ve earned them.
Mr. President, please don’t be such a cheap date.
Every Republican ran for office last year promising to slash the record spending levels that fueled Biden-era inflation. Yet, every GOP proposal now adds to the deficit. Republicans can't agree on a single major program to cut. At the very least, one might expect them to eliminate federal subsidies that prop up blue-state Medicaid schemes and high-tax policies. Instead, they plan to burn their political capital shielding those same states from the consequences of their choices.
Forget “inflation” or “invasion.” The buzzword in Washington this month is “SALT.” Lifting the cap on the state and local tax deduction is the message GOP leaders chose to go with. Brilliant!
Blue-state Republicans should export red-state policies, not act as lobbyists for high-tax regimes.
Salt may season food, but in tax policy, SALT leaves a bitter taste. Before Trump’s 2017 tax reforms, taxpayers could deduct unlimited state and local taxes from their federal burden, with some restrictions for the wealthy under the old Alternative Minimum Tax. This allowed blue-state politicians to raise state income and property taxes knowing Washington would offset the pain through greater deficit spending. Trump’s bill capped SALT deductions at $10,000 and lowered federal rates across the board.
Now, a bloc of blue-state Republicans has hijacked the budget reconciliation process to push what amounts to an unlimited national subsidy for high-tax states. With existing tax cuts and Trump’s new priorities already straining the budget, these Republicans want to burn $1 trillion over 10 years to spare New York and California politicians from a taxpayer revolt.
After rounds of internal negotiation, House leaders offered a compromise: Raise the SALT cap to $30,000 for families earning less than $400,000. The SALT caucus rejected the offer. “A higher SALT cap isn’t a luxury. It’s a matter of fairness,” declared New York Republican Reps. Elise Stefanik, Andrew Garbarino, Nick LaLota, and Mike Lawler. Fairness? They want the rest of the country to go deeper into debt to prop up New York’s failed policies.

RELATED: The last march of the moderates
Blue-state Republicans should export red-state policies, not act as lobbyists for high-tax regimes. Their job is to pressure local Democrats to cut taxes — or to help conservative voters move out. Instead, they keep fueling blue-state profligacy and shielding the very politicians who caused the mess.
Worse still, these lukewarm Republicans want to spend over $1 trillion on blue-state tax breaks instead of using that money for broad-based tax cuts that would actually boost growth. They’ve even floated raising the cap to $62,000 for individuals and $124,000 for families, with no income limits. Most of those benefits would go to households earning over half a million dollars. For comparison, the Tax Foundation reports the average American pays about $13,890 in federal income taxes. Yet, these Republicans want to let wealthy blue-staters deduct nearly 10 times that amount.
And what of Donald Trump — the be-all and end-all of the Republican Party? He pressures the Freedom Caucus to drop its demands to end blue-state Medicaid grift, but he says nothing about the SALT holdouts. Instead, he endorsed Stefanik and Lawler for re-election.
Trump left New York for Florida to escape New York’s oppressive tax regime. So why back politicians who insist on making the rest of the country pay for it?
If Trump won’t rein in these RINOs, Republicans will head into the midterms without a message — and they’ll need smelling salts to revive a self-immolated mandate.
Superstar designated hitter and pitcher Shohei Ohtani reportedly makes more in endorsements annually than entire rosters of several other teams.
The Japanese player is already the recipient of the biggest contract in MLB history, with his 10-year $700 million deal with the Los Angeles Dodgers.
However, a new report from the Athletic detailed the shocking numbers behind Ohtani's endorsement deals that, if true, would place that income higher than the total payroll of five MLB teams.
'He has blossomed.'
According to the Athletic's Ken Rosenthal, a well-known baseball journalist, Ohtani is nearing a whopping $100 million annually in endorsements.
Speaking to a person described as an industry source who was briefed on Ohtani's earnings, Rosenthal said he learned that the figure could also exceed the $100 million mark in the near future.
What's possibly more shocking is the speed at which Ohtani has reached these figures. In March 2023, the player topped Forbes' list of highest-paid athletes, noting at the time that he was taking in $35 million from endorsements. At the same time, nine other players on that list were making $13.2 million in endorsements combined.
A year later in March 2024, Sportico bumped that number to an estimated $65 million annually in endorsements. That figure made his endorsement income higher than the salary of any major-league player.
Fast-forward just a few months to July, and Ohtani's new alleged figure of $100 million in endorsements would have him making more money than the entire rosters of several teams.
The Cleveland Guardians, Baltimore Orioles, Tampa Bay Rays, Pittsburgh Pirates, and the soon-to-be-moving Oakland Athletics all have sub-$100 million payrolls.
Ohtani would eclipse at least 10 more teams if his salary weren't back-loaded to the end of his contract. Instead, he makes an annual $2 million with the Dodgers until the end of 2033. When his contract ends in 2034, when he is 39, he will get a massive $68 million per year for 10 years.
"He has blossomed," Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. "He's become way more independent, way more open, which is ironic given that the person he trusted most deceived him. We've seen his true personality come out. I think with that, he's happier than he's ever been."
The funny thing about Ohtani becoming way more open is that he barely speaks at all, but his numbers speak louder than words.
At the time of this writing, Ohtani is fourth in the league in hits, second in home runs, fourth in RBIs, fourth in batting average, second in slugging percentage, and second in OPS — all with an elbow injury.
Few players have delivered the way Ohtani is delivering, with no sign of slowing down.
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Former President Donald Trump's endorsements have been counterproductive, according to conservatives critical of the presumptive 2024 Republican presidential nominee's endorsement track record.
One of those critics is GOP Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky, who told Blaze News that he expects Trump himself will even be dissatisfied by his own endorsement decisions eventually.
'This doesn't bode well for the MAGA mission of draining the swamp, reining in three letter agencies, reforming healthcare, and keeping us out of endless wars.'
"I'm disappointed with Trump's endorsements because I think he's going to be disappointed with them eventually," Massie told Blaze News in a statement.
"When faced with choices in a primary, he has often endorsed the least conservative candidate, putting him at odds with conservative groups who are trying to improve the composition of Congress. This doesn't bode well for the MAGA mission of draining the swamp, reining in three letter agencies, reforming healthcare, and keeping us out of endless wars," he noted.
Back when Trump was still president in 2018, he endorsed Mitt Romney for U.S. Senate. But in 2019, Trump tweeted, "I'm hearing that the Great People of Utah are considering their vote for their Pompous Senator, Mitt Romney, to be a big mistake. I agree! He is a fool who is playing right into the hands of the Do Nothing Democrats! #IMPEACHMITTROMNEY"
In 2020, Trump endorsed then-Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), declaring that the lawmaker "has helped us Make America Great Again." But in 2021, Trump said that he regretted the move and called McConnell "a dour, sullen, and unsmiling political hack."
Trump also endorsed Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina in 2020.
'I plan to win this race overwhelmingly.'
Incumbent Rep. Bob Good of Virginia, who chairs the House Freedom Caucus, is currently seeking re-election, but Trump has savaged him on Truth Social, claiming that the congressman "is BAD FOR VIRGINIA, AND BAD FOR THE USA."
Trump endorsed Virginia state Sen. John McGuire, the Republican challenging Good in Virginia's 5th Congressional District.
In a statement to Blaze News, BlazeTV host Steve Deace described Good as "one of the most reliable conservatives in Congress."
Good endorsed Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis for president in 2023 before DeSantis launched a GOP presidential primary bid. But immediately after DeSantis dropped out earlier this year, Good endorsed Trump.
In a statement to Blaze News, Good pointed out that he previously defeated a Trump-backed opponent in 2020.
"Trump endorsed against me in the nomination contest in 2020 when I ran against incumbent Denver Riggleman. I won that contest overwhelmingly. I plan to win this race overwhelmingly. The people of this district know I am an America First candidate and I have been fighting for the America First agenda since I was sworn into office in January of 2021," Good declared.
Earlier this month, Blaze Media's Daniel Horowitz, an outspoken critic of Trump's endorsement track record, tweeted, "Trump now knows he can endorse every RINO at warp speed plus attack Bob Good, and there will be ZERO blowback. Nothing will change, and frankly, I can't blame him. He has zero incentive to move to the right."
GOP Rep. Matt Rosendale of Montana has said, "As Chairman of the House Freedom Caucus," Good "represents everything that most Republicans proclaim to be."
In a 2023 post, Horowitz described Rosendale as "one of the best members of the House" adding that the lawmaker "should be a no-brainer for the Senate."
But this year Trump torpedoed Rosendale's U.S. Senate bid by endorsing another candidate soon after Rosendale announced a Senate run.
In a post on Truth Social Trump said, "I also respect Matt Rosendale, and was very happy to Endorse him in the past - and will Endorse him again in the future should he decide to change course and run for his Congressional Seat. But in this instance, Tim [Sheehy] is the candidate who is currently best-positioned to DEFEAT Lazy Jon Tester, and Regain the Republican Majority in the United States Senate."
Rosendale soon dropped his Senate bid, noting, "By my calculations, with Trump endorsing my opponent and the lack of resources, the hill was just too steep."
The congressman later announced that he would run for re-election to the House but then eventually reversed course and said he would not seek office.
'Trump needs better advisors, and there are plenty of us who would be happy to help him.'
South Carolina state Rep. Adam Morgan recently ran for U.S. House but lost his Republican primary in the Palmetto State's 4th Congressional District to incumbent Rep. William Timmons, who was endorsed by Trump.
Morgan, who serves as chairman of the South Carolina Freedom Caucus, said in a statement to Blaze News that Trump's support "saved" Timmons in the contest.
"It's incredibly frustrating to have strong conservative fighters consistently undercut with these endorsements. How can we drain the swamp when we keep sending the same swamp creatures to Congress?" Morgan said.
"Trump's endorsement saved my opponent, and the numbers prove it. Trump needs better advisors, and there are plenty of us who would be happy to help him. This is a personnel issue," he noted.
Punchbowl News reported that U.S. Rep. Warren Davidson (R-Ohio) said that Trump "is endorsing moderates in most races if there's a conservative in the race."
"We can't send the swamp any people that are just going to keep funding the status quo," Davidson noted, according to the outlet.
'He is endorsing against the very kind of candidates that would work with him in the Congress.'
"I think you can look no further than Congressman Warren Davidson's comments," Deace said in his statement to Blaze News. "Trump's endorsements have always been 50-50 at best, which is still 100% better than we've gotten from previous standard-bearers. However, he has really disappointed at times."
"Trump is probably a huge reason Lindsey Grahamnesty continues to infest our ranks. Carrying out a personal grudge against Bob Good, one of the most reliable conservatives in Congress, is inexcusably petty. And Good is just one example of how Trump's endorsements have been especially establishment friendly. I know he wants unity within the party to aid his odds of winning this fall, but in too many races he is endorsing against the very kind of candidates that would work with him in the Congress if he does," Deace noted.
Politico reported that Davidson, like Trump, has endorsed McGuire.
"I'm happy to join President Trump by supporting and endorsing John McGuire for Congress," Davidson said in a statement, according to the outlet. "I look forward to serving with him in the 119th Congress to support President Trump and the America First agenda. Drain the swamp!"
Davidson had advocated against selecting Good to serve as House Freedom Caucus chair, saying in a message last year, "I ask that we consider how to best increase our influence while preserving our power to move policy in the right direction. I strongly feel that Bob Good as Chairman will impair that objective."
"I ask that you prayerfully consider electing someone else as Chairman of the House Freedom Caucus," Davidson wrote.
Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) declared in March that "Donald Trump just endorsed the worst Deep State candidate this cycle."
The senator was referring to former Rep. Mike Rogers of Michigan, who is running for U.S. Senate. Paul called Rogers "a never Trumper, and a card carrying member of the spy state that seeks to destroy Trump."
Paul then added, "You have to ask yourself who gives Trump this awful advice? Who's next, John Bolton?"
"If he's good with Mike Rogers (R-Deep State), maybe he should pick Liz Cheney for VP?" Paul also tweeted.
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Republican Rep. Warren Davidson of Ohio said that former President Donald Trump has been backing moderate candidates in most cases where there is a conservative running.
"He is endorsing moderates in most races if there's a conservative in the race," Davidson said, according to Punchbowl News. "We can't send the swamp any people that are just going to keep funding the status quo."
'We can't drain the swamp if he is endorsing moderate squishes.'
Blaze Media's Daniel Horowitz praised the congressman, tweeting, "Kudos to @WarrenDavidson. Someone needs to say it."
North Dakota state Rep. Matt Heilman also agreed with Davidson: "100%. The endorsements have been so disappointing. We can't drain the swamp if he is endorsing moderate squishes," he tweeted.
But U.S. Rep. Derrick Van Orden (R-Wis.) said in a post, "Did anyone take a second to think maybe Trump would like to actually govern instead of screaming at the sky and pretending like you are accomplishing anything other than getting yourself reelected? Did that occur to anyone?"
Trump, who is the presumptive 2024 Republican presidential nominee, is backing incumbent GOP Rep. William Timmons in the Republican primary for South Carolina's 4th Congressional District. Timmons is facing a challenge from state Rep. Adam Morgan, the South Carolina freedom caucus chairman.
"[Trump] needs to listen to a lot of different people on who to endorse," GOP Rep. Ralph Norman of South Carolina, said, according to Punchbowl, which reported that Norman supports Morgan. "I don't know how much time and thought he puts into it."
Norman backed Nikki Haley for president last year, but she ultimately dropped out of the Republican presidential primary earlier this year. Norman has indicated that he supports Trump, according to The Hill.
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