Trump took barely 18 months to conquer the party of Abraham Lincoln and Ronald Reagan, swatting aside more traditional challengers as he seized the Republican White House nomination in last year's US election.
But six months into his presidency, his disconnect with many in his party is clear, after the departure of two party stalwarts from the White House and the public shaming of his own attorney general.
And after a recent humiliating defeat in the Senate on health reforms, party insiders are warning Trump can expect similar setbacks unless he learns to work constructively with Republicans on Capitol Hill.
"If he spends his entire presidency at war with Congress, it will be a very unfulfilling four years," added Conant, who classed the current relationship between party and president as "awkward."
With chief of staff Reince Priebus and White House spokesman Sean Spicer -- both party insiders -- exiting within a week of each other, few senior Republicans remain among Trump's inner circle, besides Vice President Mike Pence.
And while Pence -- a former lawmaker in the House -- acts as a bridge to Congress, it's far from clear how much the president is seeking his advice.
Establishment Republicans have long winced at the probe into Russia's efforts to influence the 2016 presidential race and the swirling allegations into whether his campaign colluded with the Kremlin.
More recently, they have taken offense at the president's attacks on his Attorney General Jeff Sessions, a former Republican senator who has significant support among congressional conservatives.
As pressure mounts on Trump, senior figures are becoming bolder in their criticism.
As a former Republican National Committee chairman, Priebus had impeccable connections and so his ouster last week has deprived the White House of a valuable link with Capitol Hill.
Spicer -- who went a week earlier -- was also a long-time Republican insider who owed his position as Trump's mouthpiece more to his party connections than his close relations with the president.
In Priebus's place, Trump brought in John Kelly, a retired Marine Corps general who has little experience in dealing with Republican lawmakers in either the House of Representatives or Senate.
The president's chief economic advisor, former Goldman Sachs president Gary Cohn, is a registered Democrat who has donated to both parties.
Trump's daughter and son-in-law Ivanka and Jared Kushner, both senior advisors, are self-styled New York progressives.
The little trust that existed in the first place between Trump and the Republican establishment may well have been shaken in the president's first six months in office.
But Richard Keil, a former Washington-based strategist who now works with the Hill + Knowlton consultancy, said ties were not necessarily beyond repair as long as the two sides could identify shared goals, such as tax reforms.
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