Politico reports disgruntled Republicans facing voters’ fury in November are setting Labor Day as a hard deadline on ending the unpopular war in Iran, according to interviews with more than a dozen people.
“It’s different this time, they say: September is the unofficial kickoff of general election season, when more voters tune in and the stakes get higher,” reports Politico. “Amid rising U.S. casualties, gas prices and fertilizer costs, these Republicans indicated the political risk of the ongoing war is heightening as the midterms draw near.
“… [V]oters need some time to see prices coming down before Election Day,” said an anonymous GOP strategist working on battleground House races Nevada. “If we can get this normalized with some time, we’ll be okay. But if we’re looking at Labor Day coming up on us, and we still have $5 a gallon gas, we’ll be in big trouble.”
“By the first of September … it needs to be resolved,” said Dan Naylor, who runs the Lackawanna County GOP in a tough House battleground district in Pennsylvania. “You get more focused on the election at that point in time, and we need to be able to point to falling prices.”
But Politico reports that preliminary deals with Iran to end the war have evaporated, one after another, despite Trump’s promises that an agreement was imminent (possibly to briefly jigger U.S. markets), and that “lingering skepticism hangs over the negotiations.”
“This is not the first time an agreement seemed imminent, only for the war to continue,” reports Politico, and “the cracks within the GOP have started to spill into public view, with some candidates emphasizing the need for the war to wrap up soon, even if they agreed with its initial goals.”
Politico reports Rep. Ashley Hinson, the Republican nominee for U.S. Senate in Iowa, admitted at a campaign event last month that the war would become a “political liability” if it drags on beyond “the next couple of weeks.” And Sen. Jon Husted, (R-Ohio) confessed that the war “needs to,” come to an end. Others, including Sen. Pete Ricketts, who is running for reelection in Nebraska, told local radio that he wants the war ended “as quickly as possible.”
Additionally, in May and June, eight Republican lawmakers sided with Democrats to vote against Trump’s war powers, which Politico described as an “extraordinary” break from the president for a party that has proven so beholden to one man.


