FILE - In this Nov. 10, 2016 file photo, President-elect Donald Trump and House Speaker Paul Ryan of Wis., pose for photographers after a meeting in the Speaker's office on Capitol Hill in Washington. For eight years, a leaderless Republican Party has rallied around its passionate opposition to President Barack Obama and a rigid devotion to small government, free markets and fiscal discipline. No more. On the eve of his inauguration, Donald Trump is remaking the Republican Party in his image, casting aside decades of Republican orthodoxy for a murky populist agenda that sometimes clashes with core conservative beliefs.   (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File)
FILE - In this Nov. 10, 2016 file photo, President-elect Donald Trump and House Speaker Paul Ryan of Wis., pose for photographers after a meeting in the Speaker's office on Capitol Hill in Washington. For eight years, a leaderless Republican Party has rallied around its passionate opposition to President Barack Obama and a rigid devotion to small government, free markets and fiscal discipline. No more. On the eve of his inauguration, Donald Trump is remaking the Republican Party in his image, casting aside decades of Republican orthodoxy for a murky populist agenda that sometimes clashes with core conservative beliefs. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File) Credit: Alex Brandon

For eight years, a leaderless Republican Party has rallied around its passionate opposition to President Obama and an unceasing devotion to small government, free markets and fiscal discipline.

No more.

On the eve of his inauguration, Donald Trump is remaking the party in his image, casting aside decades of Republican orthodoxy for a murky populist agenda that sometimes clashes with core conservative beliefs. Yet his stunning election gives the GOP a formal leader for the first time in nearly a decade. The New York real estate mogul becomes the face of the party, the driver of its policies and its chief enforcer.

Despite their excitement, loyalists across the country concede that major questions remain about their partyโ€™s identity in the age of Trump.

The simple answer: The modern-day Republican Party stands for whatever Trump wants it to.

โ€œHeโ€™s a sometime-Republican,โ€ American Conservative Union Chairman Matt Schlapp said. โ€œDonald Trump was elected without having to really put all the details out on all these questions. We are going to see in the first six months how this plays out.โ€

Trump is eyeing a governing agenda that includes big-ticket items that Schlapp and other conservative leaders would fight against under any other circumstances. Yet some see Trumpโ€™s agenda as more in line with the concerns of average Americans, which could help the partyโ€™s underwhelming public standing and keep them in power.

The president-elect initially promised a massive infrastructure spending bill to update the nationโ€™s roads and bridges, an investment that could dwarf the infrastructure spending Republicans opposed when it appeared in Obamaโ€™s 2009 stimulus package. Trump has also vowed to put the federal government in the child care business by allowing parents to offset child care costs with tax breaks.