Since Donald Trump took the White House a decade ago, the US president has purged the Republican Party of critics and rivals.
Many politicians dropped their previous criticisms of him and took positions in his inner circle. Some never sought reelection or retired midway through their terms to avoid conflict with a president known for personal insults and a lack of tolerance for dissenting opinions.
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Several other senators who chose to continue fighting lost to pro-Trump opponents in the Republican primary.
Representative Thomas Massey, a liberal from Kentucky, is one of the last surviving dissidents. Since the U.S. president returned to power last year, he has become a rare thorn in Trump’s side, a rare Republican.
Massey voted against a major tax bill supported by the president, pushed for the release of government files related to the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein against the wishes of the White House, and was a vocal opponent of the war on Iran and U.S. aid to Israel.
Massie is currently in a battle for his career, facing an avalanche of pro-Israel spending like the one that unleashed an avalanche in next week’s Kentucky congressional primary against President Trump’s Republican opponent, former Navy SEAL Ed Gullane.
But the controversy goes beyond Trump and could serve as a litmus test for emerging fault lines within the Republican base, including military intervention and support for Israel.
For Mr. Massey’s supporters, the May 19 campaign will be a test of everything he stands for: unwavering loyalty to the U.S. Constitution, political integrity and standing up to powerful special interests.
On Wednesday, influential right-wing commentator Mike Cernovich highlighted another aspect of the Kentucky contest: a showdown that will test the campaign finances and influence of Massey-supporting podcasters over traditional conservative media.
“The Massey primary is an interesting election to watch because it shows whether podcasters and social media can drive out votes in a substantive way. That’s unlimited money for their opponents,” Cernovich wrote in X.
“If Massie loses, all MPs will be horrified. If he wins, a new media era will begin.”
Who is Massy?
So how did the 55-year-old congressman come to represent a political movement at a turning point in the modern history of American politics?
Massey, an engineer and inventor, was born in a town in the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains in West Virginia, near Kentucky and Ohio.
He attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and later found a company that helped pioneer virtual reality technology and registered dozens of patents.
Massey married his high school sweetheart Rhonda, who died of illness in 2024, with whom he had four children. The family moved to Kentucky in 2003, and Massey later sold his business to pursue a career in politics.
He became a Lewis County judge and bailiff in 2011, and a year later ran for Congress to represent Kentucky’s 4th District, a Republican stronghold that includes rural areas as well as the suburbs of Cincinnati, Ohio.
Massey quickly gained a reputation as a rebel, opposing bipartisan orthodoxy on foreign policy and his own party’s consensus on many issues.
In his first vote at the end of his term, he joined 11 other Republicans in voting against the selection of then-Speaker John Boehner, making him the only lawmaker to support his liberal colleague Justin Amash’s gavel.
Despite his willingness to vote against his party, Massie did not gain many friends on the Democratic side.
In 2021, at a time when gun violence was on the rise, Massey posted a Christmas photo of himself and his family holding semi-automatic rifles, sparking a huge backlash from Democrats.
At times, his uncompromising attitude almost brings him scorn from the public. In 2022, Massey voted against a bill that would make lynching (the extrajudicial execution of African Americans in the segregated southern United States) a federal crime.
“This bill would expand current federal ‘hate crimes’ laws. Crimes are crimes, and all victims deserve equal justice. Increased penalties for ‘hate’ tend to endanger other freedoms, including free speech,” he wrote in a social media post explaining the vote at the time.
“Lynching a person is already illegal in every state. Passing this bill would falsely imply that lynching a person is no longer a criminal act.”
Even if they opposed it, supporting a largely symbolic vote against despicable acts like lynching might have been an easier option.
The congressman said he has always had a rebellious personality.
“I was both a teacher’s pet and a teacher’s worst nightmare,” Massey recently told Mother Jones.
“I’d like to think I’ve become much more resourceful, but I still can’t afford to get the wrong answer.”
Despite his advocacy for gun rights and small government, Massey was able to work with Democrats to advance certain issues, particularly opposition to military operations overseas.
Most recently, he led the effort to release the Epstein files and forged a strong partnership with Democratic Rep. Ro Khanna to pass legislation forcing the Justice Department to release records.

israel and the people
Massey also supports Democrats in rejecting war with Iran and is one of the few Republicans to criticize America’s unconditional military aid to Israel.
Massie’s opponents, including pro-Israel groups and donors, have been airing a slew of ads against the congressman, often portraying him as not conservative enough and highlighting his votes against the tax bill.
One commercial that aired earlier this month featured deepfake artificial intelligence-generated footage of Massie holding hands with progressive Democratic congresswomen Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Ilhan Omar.
The ad said Mr Massey was involved in a “threesome” with two female MPs that was “worse than an affair”.
This was announced by a political action committee (PAC) called MAGA KY, whose largest donor is Paul Singer, a billionaire investor and one of the largest donors to the campaign arm of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC).
According to Federal Election Commission (FEC) records, MAGA KY also received nearly $1 million from another group, America 21 PAC, also funded by Singer.
On the Democratic side, opposition to Israel over human rights issues has been growing for years, as Palestinian rights advocates often support broader progressive causes.
But Mr. Massey roots his opposition to military aid to the United States’ ally in broader opposition to foreign aid.
Since the outbreak of the genocidal war in Gaza, he has become more vocal about human rights abuses by Israel, often questioning why U.S. taxpayers are funding rights abuses abroad.
Next, pro-Israel groups, donors and funders are targeting Massie.
Massey, who is embroiled in a close race with Galine, has emphasized the pernicious role of the pro-Israel lobby in American politics.
“A foreign interest group called AIPAC got into the ears of the current Speaker (Mike Johnson) and demanded 16 votes on Israel and the Middle East in April,” the congressman told conservative commentator Tucker Carlson earlier this month.
“The U.S. Congress has yet to cast 16 votes in April.”
Mr. Massey’s opponent, Mr. Galine, is relying on his military service and Mr. Trump’s support to make his case to voters.
“He has sided with the radical Democratic Party of liberal elites over and over again against us and our families,” Gullane said of Massey at a candidate forum earlier this month.
“President Trump knows this. Our party knows this, and you know this. That’s why President Trump asked me to re-elect him and gave me his strongest support to join him in this campaign and be your champion in Washington.”
But Massie insisted the race was close not because of his opponent’s qualifications or Trump’s support, but because millions of dollars in pro-Israel campaign funds were spent to oust him from Congress.
In an interview with Carlson, he emphasized that despite running against Trump, he overwhelmingly won the past two primaries.
“Their position is more war. More conflict. More bombs. ‘Send more aid to foreign countries.’ And those are the things I’ve been voting against,” he said, referring to the pro-Israel lobby.
“So the real reason this is a real race and I might lose is because foreign lobbies have fully funded my opponent, more than ever before in a Republican campaign.”
Mr Massey’s office and Mr Gallein’s campaign had not responded to Al Jazeera’s requests for comment at the time of publication.
