How the Maga world became divided - and what it means for Trump

23 minutes ago Share Save Anthony Zurcher Senior North America reporter Share Save

BBC

At a meeting of his cabinet at the White House two weeks ago, US President Donald Trump looked around the long room filled with his top advisers, administration officials and aides, and made a prediction. The next Republican presidential candidate, he said, is "probably sitting at this table". "It could be a couple of people sitting at this table," he added, hinting at possible electoral clashes to come. Despite a constitutional amendment limiting him to two four-year terms, his supporters chanted "four more years" at a rally last Tuesday night in Pennsylvania. Trump said at the time that the final three years of his second term amount to an "eternity". But in the cabinet room last week, when talking about prospects for the 2028 Republican president nomination, he was clear: "It's not going to be me." The next presidential election may seem a long way off, but Trump's own speculation – and certain frictions within Trump's coalition - suggest that the jockeying to succeed and define the Make America Great Again (Maga) movement after Trump is well under way.

EPA/Shutterstock At 78 when he was sworn in for the second time, Trump was the oldest person ever elected president - some media outlets suggested may be slowing him down; Trump called such speculation "seditious"

In last month's local elections, the Republican Party lost support among the minority and working-class voters who helped Trump win back the White House in 2024. Members of his team have feuded over policy. And some, most notably Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene, have cut loose from his orbit, accusing the president of losing touch with the Americans who gave him power. There has been speculation about fractures within the Maga base in certain quarters of the international press, as well as at home.

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