Trump's incredible shrinking tent

Axios Axios

https://www.axios.com/politics-policy/donald-trump" target="_blank">Donald Trump is torching the coalition that made him president, seemingly unaware — or simply unconcerned — with the depth of discontent permeating his movement.

Why it matters: Trump won back the White House with the most eclectic alliance in modern politics — a blend of MAGA diehards, crypto evangelists, nonwhite men, podcast bros, anti-war populists and culture-war Christians.


  • What Republicans celebrated as a once-in-a-generation coalition may turn out to be exactly that, never to be reassembled.

Zoom in: Over the last two weeks, Trump has tested the loyalty of MAGA's Christian base with a series of extraordinary provocations.

Within the hour, Trump posted an AI-generated image of himself as a Christ-like figure — healing a bedridden man, flanked by bald eagles and the American flag.

Between the lines: https://www.axios.com/2026/04/11/pope-leo-xiv-trump-catholic-iran-war" target="_blank">Catholics, who make up roughly a fifth of the U.S. population, are America's most powerful swing religious bloc.

Trump's attacks on the pope — who is far more popular than he is — https://www.axios.com/2026/04/13/trump-pope-leo-catholic-swing-voters" target="_blank">could prove self-destructive in the midterms.

https://images.axios.com/9N2AJxm5QK5oLSAb6KerajF06HI=/2026/04/13/1776103962675.jpeg" />
Evangelical radio host Erick Erickson warns Trump could lose Christian voters.

Screenshot via X

Zoom out: Trump's war on his own coalition extends far beyond the pews.

What to watch: The broad erosion in support is now threatening MAGA's foundation.

What they're saying: "What matters most to the American people is having a commander-in-chief who takes decisive action to eliminate threats and keep them safe, which is exactly what President Trump did with the successful Operation Epic Fury," White House spokesman Davis Ingle said in a statement.

  • A White House official told Axios: "Despite some online commentators with large followings publicly disagreeing with the president's decision — and many legacy media outlets eagerly highlighting their comments to try and sow division — the MAGA base is not wavering one bit.

    These commentators claiming this will somehow fracture the president's support is not backed by or reflected in the polling data."

The bottom line: "The coalition that got Trump elected is completely fractured and in smithereens," said conservative host Megyn Kelly, a target of Trump's recent ire over Iran.

  • "The question is now not who has Trump lost.

    The question is who remains."

Read full article at Axios →