Lethbridge Herald

Candidates vow support for Trump

IN TEXAS GOP PRIMARY, IT’S WHO CAN LOVE TRUMP MOST

- Paul J. Weber

George P. Bush’s campaign flyers in Texas declare that he’s “standing beside our president” — the one who called his dad, Jeb, an embarrassm­ent to his family and a pathetic person.

At a political forum outside San Antonio, another Republican candidate brags about his “bigly” wins over Democrats. Another hopeful in Houston, just days after a mass shooting at a Florida high school killed 17 people, sent voters a photo of herself holding an assault rifle — below the words “Kathaleen Wall stands with Trump.”

Texas holds the nation’s first 2018 primary elections Tuesday, and the campaign is providing a vivid exhibition of the Trump effect in GOP politics. Some races are playing out in a roadshow of one-upping emulation of the combative president, in which there’s no such thing as cozying up too close or too ardently, regardless of his rough edges or low approval ratings nationwide.

“I’m Robert Stovall, and like President Trump, I realize the swamp is the problem,” begins a campaign ad for Stovall, a San Antonio Republican Party leader now running for Congress. He stands in a literal swamp wearing a “Make American Great Again” hat and cocks a shotgun at the end.

It’s like nothing seen before in Texas politics, even when a Texan was in the White House. Love of George W. Bush’s style of big government conservati­sm wasn’t a staple of campaigns here. A decade later, his nephew George P. Bush, the Texas land commission­er, is thanking President Donald Trump’s son Donald Trump Jr. for endorsing him in his bid for reelection.

Texas candidates aren’t alone in courting Trump diehards who make up the GOP base — and who can be counted on to show up in typically low-turnout primary elections. Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette, who is running for governor, has trumpeted Trump’s endorsemen­t, while an outside group accuses his GOP rival of “abandoning” the president. In Indiana, three Republican­s running for Senate are all portraying themselves as his most steadfast ally.

The impression of a Trump White House at war with its enemies is stoking the atmosphere. “It’s about he’s our Republican president and if we don’t stand together and we don’t defend the party and conservati­ve ideas, no one is,” said Brendan Steinhause­r, an Austin-based Republican strategist. A Quinnipac University survey in late February put Trump’s approval rating at 86 per cent among Republican­s but just 37 per cent overall.

As Republican­s brace for a difficult election this November — the president’s party typically loses congressio­nal seats in the midterm cycle — they could not have asked for a gentler warm-up than Texas, where the GOP holds such a commanding edge that most election-year drama dissolves once the primaries are done. Democrats haven’t won a statewide race since 1994 and are not seen as favoured to flip any of six congressio­nal seats opened up by GOP retirement­s on Capitol Hill.

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