part of the republican party. and he will continue to do that. reporter: and joining us now is washington post national political reporter isaac ards. thank you so much for being with us. i want to start with the piece that you co-authored entitled trump plots aggressive midterm strategy seen in gop as double-edged sword. so could you mean by the double edged swords. in the primary, what we heard was trump s first general election rally. in the primaries he was the envy of all. his endorsement, his backing, every candidate wanted that and what you started to see almost immediately after those candidates won the primary was, taking trump off the top of their website, like dr. oz did. and starting to try to put some distance between themselves and trump. because while he is the number one thing for primary voters, the republican base, with the general election electorate, it is a little bit of a different story. and so what strategists are trying to figure out, republican s
republic. but the next day, when asked if he thought every trump supporter was a threat to the country, here was his response? i don t consider any trump supporter to be a threat to the country. i do think anyone who calls for the use of violence can cause violence because there is knowledge when the election has been won insisting on changing the way in which the rule of votes, that is a threat to democracy. democracy. a bit softer speech coming from the president there. the national republican senatal committee has blown through all of the funds it raised since early 2021. now the new york times reports the chair of the nrsc, rick scott green lit massive spending on digital ads, not to promote candidates for senate, but to