ANALYSIS: A Splintered Republican Party Stumbles Down Homestretch

Priebus says the GOP is working "together at all levels." Ryan says not so much.

Ryan says he will not defend Donald Trump or campaign with him but didn’t withdraw his endorsement — a delicate balancing act not only for Ryan’s political future but also for the dozens of endangered down-ballot Republicans looking for guidance on how to handle Trump’s latest controversy and potential controversies to come.

Trump’s latest public spat with establishment Republicans in the wake of what he called his “locker room banter” about groping women, for which he has since apologized, has taken center stage over the last 24 hours.

Disagreement over how to handle what’s left of Trump’s splintered support among party leaders has bubbled to the surface in the RNC. Influential GOP state party chairman Robert Graham of Arizona attacked Republicans who were waffling on backing Trump.

“It is hard to understand why some are willing to surrender the principles and values we espouse,” he wrote on Monday afternoon. “Leadership is more than stopping political mail, not campaigning for someone or making statements condemning a person’s comments made nearly a dozen years before.”

Still, so far, the Republican Party’s attempt to localize Senate races has been rather successful. Most polls to this point have shown GOP Senate candidates with slightly more support than Trump in most competitive states.

But even if enough 2016 GOP hopefuls manage to steer their way across the finish line and maintain control of Congress, it seems clear that the Republican Party, its elected leaders, its nominee and, most important, its supporters across the country look to remain splintered even on Nov. 9.