Trump strikes Iran as midterm parties clash

A military strike on Iran just detonated right in the middle of midterm season, and every politician is scrambling to pick a lane.

Texas Senate primary heats up fast
  • Jasmine Crockett blasted the strikes, insisting only Congress can greenlight war.
  • Her rival, James Talarico, kept it short with an anti-forever-war stance.
  • John Cornyn, Ken Paxton, and Wesley Hunt all praised Trump's move.
  • Republican nominees tripped over each other to cheer the operation.
Democrats split hard on the strikes
  • Greg Landsman called it overdue after Iran's crackdown on protesters.
  • Henry Cuellar backed the action, calling Iran's threat longstanding.
  • Tom Suozzi flat-out agreed with the president's stated objectives.
  • Swing-district Dems quietly broke ranks from their party's antiwar wing.
Maine's Senate race gets loud
  • Graham Platner, a Marine vet, ripped the bombing as political desperation.
  • Janet Mills torched Trump for pushing the country into reckless conflict.
  • Platner insisted no Democrat should get behind this kind of operation.
  • Both candidates framed the strikes as a midterm-motivated gamble.
GOP caution lurks beneath the cheerleading
  • Susan Collins stayed quiet most of Saturday before a measured statement.
  • Zach Nunn offered praise but drew a hard line against ground troops.
  • Thomas Massie openly opposed the war, calling it anti-American First.
  • A big chunk of Republicans preferred a wait-and-see posture.
Polling paints a messy picture
  • Only 21 percent of Americans backed a U.S. attack on Iran.
  • Yet 79 percent expressed serious concern over Iran's nuclear program.
  • Foreign conflicts have historically cut both ways in midterms.
  • Political fallout remains totally unpredictable at this stage.
 

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