John Krull

This column was originally published by TheStatehouseFile.com.

By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com
April 13, 2026

President Donald Trump has the strangest set of priorities.

Here he is, having trapped the United States in a war with Iran that no one outside of his inner circle seemed to want. Peace talks have broken down, largely because Trump delegated them to Vice President J.D. Vance and a crew of businesspeople who have less experience in diplomacy than your average crew of kindergarteners.

Before the president ordered the first attack on Iran, the U.S. economy already was struggling. Inflation, which Trump promised to end immediately upon taking office, was running a half point to a full point higher than it had been when former President Joe Biden was in the White House.

Worse, job growth has slowed to a trickle.

Under Biden’s leadership, the U.S. economy added 15.5 million jobs. Under Trump, in February of this year, the American economy lost jobs—133,000 of them, to be exact.

Even in his relatively good months, job growth under this president has trailed the marks set by Biden and former President Barack Obama.

This has left Americans squeezed by an unrelenting vice. They have been forced to pay more for goods and services at the same time that many of them are finding it harder and harder to find work.

With challenges such as these, one might think that Trump would have more than enough to keep him occupied.

But … no.

This president has taken time, focus and energy away from the two major crises facing the United States—crises that he in large part created—to insert himself into six Indiana Senate primary races.

And he has done so for the smallest and pettiest of reasons.

Trump is angry with these six Hoosier state lawmakers because they didn’t vote with him on his ill-conceived and quite possibly illegal plan to gerrymander Indiana’s congressional districts in the middle of the decade and thus steal a seat or two in this year’s midterm election.

The Hoosier legislators didn’t buck the president because they disliked him or weren’t loyal Republicans.

Most of them have far longer GOP pedigrees than Trump does. He didn’t fully commit to the Republican Party until he decided to run for president and, even then, he refused to rule out running a third-party campaign if he didn’t get the GOP nomination in 2016.

The Indiana lawmakers on Trump’s hate list also have been much more consistently conservative than the president, the needle of whose ideological compass gyrates like a weathervane in a windstorm, depending upon his mercurial mood swings.

No, the Hoosier six—and 15 other Republican members of the Indiana Senate, a majority of the caucus—voted against Trump’s foolish redistricting plan for a good reason.

Their constituents did not want it.

The ones who held town halls to gather public sentiment learned that the president’s election-rigging scheme was about as popular as a terminal disease. The mail and phone calls the senators received on the issue ran to 90% against. The few polls taken revealed similar opposition.

None of that deterred Trump.

He wanted the senators to defy the people who had put them in office.

And that’s what he still wants.

Recent reports suggest that Trump staffers in the White House—treading closer to the line of illegality than any competent attorney would want them to—have been pressuring and bargaining with a woman, one of two, challenging Indiana Sen. Greg Goode, R-Terre Haute, to get her to drop out. Goode, whose record of partisanship is remarkably rabid, is one of the six lawmakers on Trump’s list.

The president’s minions have been threatening and enticing this primary candidate because they think Goode will be easier to beat in a two-person race. Their blandishments and blustering have been recorded by the candidate.

(Yes, even though Trump himself got into legal trouble for encouraging Georgia’s secretary of state in a call to alter vote totals in 2020, his troops still haven’t learned not to have damaging phone conversations in states where only one party has to consent to recording the talk. Quick learners, they are not.)

So, as the United States lurches toward being stuck in a quagmire in the Middle East and the American economy struggles and stumbles, the president of the United States diverts his focus to Indiana legislative races for no reason other than feelings of personal pique.

Gee, do you suppose there’s a connection there?

John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students. The views expressed are those of the author only and should not be attributed to Franklin College. Also, the views and opinions expressed are those of the author only and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Indiana Citizen or any other affiliated organization.

 


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