A revolt is brewing inside Trump’s own party.
Establishment Republicans are scheming to sabotage what Americans support.
And one RINO just revealed how far he’ll go against Trump and JD Vance.
As West Wing Daily reports:
Establishment Republicans on Capitol Hill keep scheming to tank President Trump’s deal to end the Iran War.
Polls show the agreement is popular.
A CBS Survey found that 78 percent of Americans want the war to end.
An Economist/YouGov survey found that 66 percent of Americans support Trump’s position of making a deal to end the war.
A Fabrizio, Lee and Associates poll revealed that 67 percent of Americans supported Trump’s deal to bring the conflict to a close.
The only real constituency for continuing the war resided in the DC swamp, where neoconservatives spent decades plotting for a massive regime change war in Iran.
Georgia Republican Congressman Rich McCormick spoke for the many in the RINO establishment when he told reporters that he doesn’t care what President Trump or Vice President Vance says about the deal to end the war.
McCormick and other establishment figures are trying to scuttle Trump’s deal by pressuring him to adopt red lines that go far beyond Trump’s America First policy of stopping Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon.
And the latest trap McCormick tried to set for Trump was on Iran’s ballistic missile program.
“I don’t really track what the vice president says; I have my own opinion. I’ve been in the military for 20 years. I served overseas in the Persian Gulf for a couple of tours. I’m a Marine by nature. I’ll tell you what I’m not gonna have: a Tehran regime that’s pursuing ballistic missiles, pursuing nuclear arms. It says they’re gonna rain down fire from above on the United States. It’s attacked us 40 times; proxy terrorist organizations have killed 1,000 people. I don’t really care what they choose to do. I know what we should do,” McMormick told reporters.
McCormick’s comments came in response to Trump dodging demands by warmongers in DC to keep the war going by expanding the scope of goals beyond denying Iran a nuclear weapon.
“I’m saying that if other countries have them, it’s a little bit unfair for them not to have some,” Trump said at the G-7 Summit.
“You can’t tell a country, whether Israel or Iran, that they’re not allowed to have any self-defense. That’s not what the president has asked,” Trump added.
McMormick bragged about how he planned to openly defy Trump on ending the war with Iran.
“Once again, I’m not worried about what the president says or what the vice president’s gonna say because what I have is my own opinion because I have very strong feelings about that Tehran regime, which I do not trust, and I would love to see eliminated. That’s my opinion; nobody else… And as I said, I stick by my experiences and my opinion,” McCormick concluded.
Trump’s worries about any potential deal aren’t just that Iran won’t live up to its end of the bargain; they are also that Trump’s own party will try to sabotage any agreement because a regime-change war with Iran has long sat atop the swamp’s wish list.





