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President Trump took aim at Indiana Senate Majority Leader Rod Bray after the Republican leader “betrayed” the party and resisted a White House-backed push to redraw the state’s congressional maps, vowing to “work tirelessly” to remove Bray from office.

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TRUMP UNLEASHES ON INDIANA GOP LEADER, VOWS POLITICAL PAYBACK OVER MAPS FIGHT

 

 

President Donald Trump has opened a new front in his ongoing battle with Republican officials he accuses of disloyalty, taking direct aim at Indiana Senate Majority Leader Rod Bray after the lawmaker resisted a White House-backed effort to redraw the state’s congressional maps.

In a sharply worded statement, Trump accused Bray of “betraying the Republican Party” by refusing to advance redistricting changes that Trump allies argued would strengthen GOP prospects in future elections. The president framed the dispute not as a policy disagreement, but as a test of loyalty — and declared that Bray had failed it.

“Rod Bray turned his back on Republicans when it mattered most,” Trump said, vowing to “work tirelessly” to remove him from office.

 

A High-Stakes Redistricting Clash

The conflict centers on a push by Trump-aligned operatives to revisit Indiana’s congressional boundaries, a move supporters claimed was necessary to counter Democratic gains nationally. Bray, however, resisted the effort, arguing that reopening maps outside the normal redistricting cycle would undermine public trust and invite legal challenges.

That resistance was enough to trigger Trump’s fury.

According to sources close to the White House, the president views the Indiana fight as emblematic of a broader problem: Republican leaders in statehouses who, in his view, lack the will to fully execute the party’s national strategy.

 

 

Loyalty Test Goes Public

Trump’s vow to target Bray marks a dramatic escalation, transforming an internal GOP disagreement into a public political showdown. Allies of the president are already discussing primary challenges and political pressure campaigns aimed at unseating the Indiana Senate leader.

“This is about accountability,” a Trump adviser said. “If you run as a Republican and block Republican priorities, there are consequences.”

Bray’s office has pushed back, stressing that his decision was based on state law, institutional norms, and a desire to avoid prolonged court battles. Supporters say he acted as a steward of Indiana’s legislative process rather than a partisan warrior.

 

 

 

Party Rift on Display

The episode highlights a growing divide within the Republican Party — between Trump’s demand for unwavering alignment and state-level leaders who prioritize local governance and legal constraints over national political pressure.

For Indiana Republicans, the stakes are immediate and personal. For the party nationally, the clash underscores a broader question: how much independence elected Republicans can exercise before becoming targets themselves.

As Trump sharpens his focus on Rod Bray, the message to GOP leaders across the country is unmistakable — resistance will not be forgotten, and loyalty battles are far from over.

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