
"You know, we have two types. We have the type that goes along with us, and believes in us, and, they're with us all the way. And that, I would say, is 95 percent, right? And then we have the type that needs a little love all the time, no matter what it is. For the easiest thing on religion or Republicanism, the easiest thing to pass, they always make it difficult, but they always get there,"
"I said, Chip, how you doing, Chip?' Hello, sir. Sir, I can't quite get there. I just don't know. Could I come over for breakfast?' You know, we have a nine o'clock vote, right? I said, really, isn't that r-?' Sir, I just-, you got to get me there, sir.' Let's have breakfast, Chip. Great.' Then I get others, pretty much the same nine. I don't want to name too many, but I would. And they always get there."
Donald Trump opened the National Prayer Breakfast by attacking conservative House Republicans, naming Rep. Chip Roy and Rep. Thomas Massie and criticizing the Democratic Party. He described receiving 3 a.m. calls from Speaker Mike Johnson about nine dissenting Republicans who require extra cajoling to support measures on religion, Republicanism, and tax cuts. Trump portrayed roughly 95 percent of House Republicans as loyal while singling out recurring dissenters who complicate votes. He recounted calling lawmakers, inviting them to breakfast, and mocking one lawmaker as an "automatic no" who opposed major GOP accomplishments including tax cuts.
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