During a press conference about infrastructure held at Trump Tower on Aug. 15, President Donald Trump said that “both sides,” including the “alt-left” were to blame for the violent rally in Charlottesville, VA.
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“This was genuinely appalling,” said Charlie Sykes, formerly a longtime conservative radio host in Wisconsin.

Sykes was a vocal Republican Trump critic during the campaign, when the then-candidate had a tendency to play to his nationalist, populist base rather than focus on the general electorate. It worked for Trump last time — and his display on Tuesday fit that pattern again.

“He was undisciplined and reckless and frankly morally indefensible, but I have to tell you, if you spend five minutes listening to conservative talk radio, you will know this will play well with his base,” Sykes said. “His base has been conditioned to accept this what-aboutism, ‘let’s not talk about Nazis and white supremacists, what about the alt-left? What about Antifa?’ That was the theme of conservative radio all day.”

“It's going to be a huge political backlash,” Sykes continued. “But it will play well with his base.”

He’s still, unfortunately and shamefully, very popular among Republicans in Republican districts.

Peter Wehner, a veteran of the Bush White House and a vocal Trump critic

Other Republicans have sought to lower the temperature in the wake of heated racial rhetoric and violence.

Just hours before Trump spoke, Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, a Republican who has uneasily coexisted with Trump, called for removing from the statehouse grounds in Annapolis the statue of the U.S. Supreme Court justice who wrote the infamous Dred Scott decision upholding slavery. Removing Roger B. Taney’s statue was “the right thing to do,” Hogan said.

Katie Glueck contributed to this report.

Lesley Clark: 202-383-6054, @lesleyclark

David Goldstein: 202-383-6105, @GoldsteinDavidJ