NEW YORK — Donald Trump is struggling in his efforts to unify the Republican Party behind his presidential campaign, the difficulty immediately underscored Thursday by a startling exchange of negative comments with GOP House Speaker Paul Ryan who said he was not ready to support him.
Although Trump is now the party's presumptive nominee, Ryan said Thursday: "I'm just not ready to do that at this point. I'm not there right now." Still, he added: "I hope to. And I want to," in comments on CNN's "The Lead."
Trump responded, in a statement released by his campaign, that he was "not ready to support" Ryan's agenda as the party's leader in the U.S. House. "Perhaps in the future we can work together and come to an agreement about what is best for the American people," he said.
Two days after the Indiana primary all but sealed Trump's victory as the man who will lead the GOP ticket in November, he is appealing to big-money donors he blasted during the primaries as he takes his first steps toward raising the massive amounts of cash he'll need for the general election campaign.
That effort was hardly helped by the rejection — for now — by Ryan, the Wisconsin congressman who was Mitt Romney's running mate in 2012. In addition, Romney and former President George W. Bush said they do not plan to attend the party's national convention in July.
Trump is aiming to broaden his primary insurgency into a full-fledged general election campaign, reaching out to party heavyweights and trying to repair his sometimes strained relationships with the Republican National Committee.
Upbeat still, Trump said in a brief interview with The Associated Press that his message has made the GOP "the hottest party around."
His campaign is trying to convert that energy into dollars.