NEWS
🚨BREAKING Republican Donors Pull $500 Million From Trump — The Mass Exodus Begins | Buffett। It’s hard to overstate how big this is. Donald Trump just lost the Republican Party’s biggest financial lifeline. We’re talking about nearly $500 million in committed donor money—gone. These aren’t small-dollar MAGA donors. These are the billionaire mega-donors who fund campaigns, super PACs, and the entire GOP machine. And they’re walking away less than a year before the election. Why? Because Trump is no longer an asset—he’s a liability. After the 2022 midterm disaster, donors watched Trump-backed candidates lose winnable races. Then came 91 felony charges, tens of millions spent on legal fees, and campaign money redirected to lawyers instead of voters. That was the breaking point. Private donor calls turned into leaks. One donor called it “throwing good money after bad.” Another said supporting Trump had become financial malpractice. And when Trump lashed out—attacking donors who questioned him—the checkbooks slammed shut. Now Republicans are trapped: Stick with Trump and lose funding, or distance themselves and face his base. This isn’t just a money problem. It’s an existential crisis. The party that once revolved around Trump is now deciding whether it can survive him.
🚨BREAKING Republican Donors Pull $500 Million From Trump — The Mass Exodus Begins | Buffett।
It’s hard to overstate how big this is.
Donald Trump just lost the Republican Party’s biggest financial lifeline.
We’re talking about nearly $500 million in committed donor money—gone.
These aren’t small-dollar MAGA donors.
These are the billionaire mega-donors who fund campaigns, super PACs, and the entire GOP machine.
And they’re walking away less than a year before the election.
Why?
Because Trump is no longer an asset—he’s a liability.
After the 2022 midterm disaster, donors watched Trump-backed candidates lose winnable races.
Then came 91 felony charges, tens of millions spent on legal fees, and campaign money redirected to lawyers instead of voters.
That was the breaking point.
Private donor calls turned into leaks.
One donor called it “throwing good money after bad.”
Another said supporting Trump had become financial malpractice.
And when Trump lashed out—attacking donors who questioned him—the checkbooks slammed shut.
Now Republicans are trapped:
Stick with Trump and lose funding,
or distance themselves and face his base.
This isn’t just a money problem.
It’s an existential crisis.
The party that once revolved around Trump is now deciding
whether it can survive him.
