The GOP tumbles toward anarchy: ‘It’s every person for himself or herself’
The Washington Post

The House speaker abandons Trump in a bid to save GOP majorities in Congress. Read the full story

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The GOP Civil War: A Party Divided Cannot Stand
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Carrie DannTo demonstrate the Republican Party’s dicey situation up and down the ballot with just four weeks until Election Day, just look at the NBC/WSJ poll we released on Monday. According to the poll, two-thirds of GOP voters — 67% — say that Republican congressional candidates should continue to support Donald Trump after his lewd 2005 comments about women. Another 9% of Republican voters say these GOP candidates should no longer support Trump, and an additional 14% believe they should call on him to drop out of the presidential race. While that overall 67%-23% margin seems like good news for Trump, you can’t win a national election when nearly a quarter of your party thinks its candidates should dump Trump. Maybe more importantly, if you’re a Republican candidate who DOES want to discard Trump, you have two-thirds of your party’s voters disagreeing with you. It’s an unsustainable position for the Republican Party – and it explains why Republican members of Congress up for re-election are so conflicted about how to thread this needle.
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First Read’s Morning Clips: Trump Backers Vow Revenge on GOP
A roundup of the most important political news stories of the day.
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Trump Leads His Base Into Battle as GOP Civil War Breaks Out
The recent defections from Trump amount to an unprecedented rejection of a nominee by his party, but it’s only the first volley in the GOP civil war.
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Speaker Ryan Breaks From Trump, to Focus on Congressional Races
The speaker’s announcement follows other GOP leaders who rescinded their endorsements of Donald Trump. Despite backing away from Trump, Speaker Ryan did not withdraw his endorsement.
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Poll: Clinton Leads Trump by Double Digits After Vulgar Comments
In a new NBC News-WSJ poll taken after the Friday afternoon release of Donald Trump’s vulgar comments, but before Sunday’s debate, Hillary Clinton leads Donald Trump by double digits.
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Sen. McCain: ‘I Cannot Vote for Either One’
Senator John McCain says he may write in Senator Lindsey Graham for president.
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Supreme Court to Hear Case Involving Racial Bias in the Jury Room
The Supreme Court considers the case of a Hispanic man convicted after a juror said during deliberations, “I think he did it because he’s Mexican.”
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