Article snippet: The TAKE with Rick Klein If there are storms a-coming, as Stormy Daniels herself warned President Donald Trump on “Saturday Night Live,” it's still sunny out there for the president inside his own party. As primary season starts in earnest with four states voting tomorrow, there are few policy fault lines inside Republican primaries, but plenty of novel ways to argue over the true “MAGA” mantle. In West Virginia’s Senate race, former coal baron Don Blankenship was pointedly anti-endorsed by Donald Trump Jr., yet responded by informing him that “your dad will have no better supporter” in Washington. His two major rivals would beg to differ. In Indiana, one of the three major candidates, Rep. Todd Rokita, has campaigned with a cardboard cutout of Trump and was forced to take down yard signs that falsely suggested he was endorsed by the president. The other two candidates are aboard the Trump train, too. Even in Ohio, where Gov. John Kasich’s lieutenant governor, Mary Taylor, is running to replace him, Taylor has disavowed the onetime (and maybe future) Trump rival she’s served under while cozying up to the president’s agenda. So yes, on one level, Republicans are again fighting with each other, in divisive primaries that may hurt them in November. But it’s worth noting that the fights are almost exclusively now about how much they love Trump, and how faithful they pledge to be to his agenda. The RUNDOWN with MaryAlice Parks They say when you’re ... Link to the full article to read more