Trump's not invincible.
Deep-pocketed donors are aiming to play spoilers and thwart Trump's try for a second Republican nomination for the White House.
"There were people that don't like Trump at all but were very skeptical that he could be stopped," Eric Levine, Eiseman Levine Lehrhaupt & Kakoyiannis' head of litigation and bankruptcy department said in an interview with The New York Times.
Levine said he's shifted support from Sen Tim Scott (R-SC) after he bowed out to former UN Ambassador Nikki Haley.
And he believes there are plenty of bankrollers like him who think there are chinks in Trump's armor that are ripe to be exploited.
"They now believe he can be stopped," he said. "His aura of invincibility is just peeled away completely."
Levine is aiming to raise funds for a Haley event on Dec. 4, according to the outlet.
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The cousin of former President George W. Bush (who voted for then-candidate Joe Biden in 2020 and Libertarian, Gary Johnson in 2016), said he's seeing fissures in the Trump machine.
“The topic that everyone is on is, ‘How do you beat Donald Trump,’” he said.
Trump continues dominating the field of GOP contenders vying for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination even as he remains a central defendant in four active criminal cases.
Last month, hedge fund billionaire investor Leon Cooperman came forward determined to stop the 45th president becoming the 47th.
“It would be terrible for the country if Donald Trump were reelected,” he told CNN in a rare public rebuke by a deep-pocketed Republican donor. “He’s a divisive human being who belongs in jail.”