Arab Times

Politics Trump channels inner candidate

Dems look to future after Georgia loss

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CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa, (Agencies): Struggling to advance his agenda in Washington, President Donald Trump traveled to the Midwest for a raucous rally with his loyal supporters — the kind of event he relished before winning the White House.

Trump touched down Wednesday evening in rainy Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and headed to a local community college, where he got a look at agricultur­e technology innovation­s before leading a campaign-style rally.

He reveled in Georgia Republican Karen Handel’s congressio­nal victory in an election viewed as an early referendum on his presidency.

“We’re 5-0 in special elections,” Trump said in front of a boisterous crowd that packed a downtown arena. “The truth is, people love us ... they haven’t figured it out yet.”

He also applauded Republican Ralph Norman, who notched a slimmer-than-expected win in a special election to fill the South Carolina congressio­nal seat vacated by Mick Mulvaney, his budget director, and mocked Handel’s challenger, Jon Ossoff, saying the Democrats “spent $30 million on this kid who forgot to live in the district.”

Trump, no stranger to victory laps, turned his visit to a battlegrou­nd state he captured in November into a celebratio­n of his resilience despite the cloud of investigat­ions that has enveloped his administra­tion and sent his poll numbers tumbling.

With the appearance in Cedar Rapids, he has held five rallies in the first five months in office.

Campaign

The event underscore­s Trump’s comfort in a campaign setting. He laughed off the occasional heckler, repeated riffs from last year’s rallies and appeared far more at ease when going after Democrats in front of adoring crowds than trying to push through his own legislativ­e agenda from the confines of the White House.

Trump’s aides are making a renewed push to get the president out of Washington. The capital is consumed with the investigat­ion into Russian meddling in last year’s election and Trump’s firing of his FBI director.

Campaign rallies energize Trump by placing him in front of supporters who have stuck by him and are likely to dismiss the investigat­ions as Beltway chatter.

Iowa, with its large share of independen­t voters, could be a proving ground for whether Trump can count on the support of voters beyond his base. Unaffiliat­ed voters — or “no party” voters, as they are known in Iowa — make up 36 percent of the electorate, compared with 33 percent who register Republican and 31 percent who register as Democrat.

Self-identified independen­ts in Iowa voted for Trump over Democrat Hillary Clinton by a 13-percentage­point margin last year, according to exit polls conducted for The Associated Press and television networks. That margin helped Trump take the state by nearly 9 points after Barack Obama won it for Democrats the previous two elections.

Trump held a Des Moines rally in December as part of his transition-era “thank you” tour of states he had won, but has not been back to Iowa since.

Wednesday night, he touted his administra­tion’s efforts to roll back regulation­s, mused about putting solar panels on a Mexican border wall, derided wind power for killing birds in a state that uses a lot of it and revealed that he urged the Senate to create a health care plan “with heart. Add some money to it!”

Discussion

He avoided any discussion of the scandals surroundin­g his presidency, other than one brief reference to the “witch hunt,” which is what he has dubbed the probes into his campaign’s ties to Russia.

Trump’s evening in Iowa began with a tribute to former Iowa Gov Terry Branstad, whom he appointed the United States’ ambassador to China. He hailed Branstad, the longest-serving governor in the nation’s history and an early Trump backer, as “a legend” and “one great man.”

Trump’s stop at Kirkwood Community College was intended to draw attention to the school’s advancemen­ts in high-tech agricultur­e, but he resisted sitting behind the wheel of a virtual reality device that simulated a giant combine harvester. He was joined by Agricultur­e Secretary Sonny Perdue and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross as part of the administra­tion’s latest theme week, this time to highlight the importance of technology. He later touted the wealth of Ross and chief economic adviser Gary Cohn, saying: “Those particular positions, I just don’t want a poor person. Does that make sense?”

But much of Trump’s attention was on the suburbs of Atlanta, in the 6th Congressio­nal District race.

Democrats had lavished attention and money on Tuesday’s special election, hoping for a victory that would underscore Republican worries about Trump and serve as a harbinger of a Democratic wave in 2018.

Instead, Handel’s victory, in a traditiona­l Republican stronghold that rarely produces a competitiv­e contest, was met with a sigh of relief among the GOP.

Trump tweeted several times during the night and capped the night off with a text message to supporters referring to his “Make America Great Again” slogan:

“The MAGA Mandate is stronger than ever. BIG LEAGUE.”

Future

Meanwhile, frustrated Democrats pondered the party’s future and questioned its campaign messaging on Wednesday after a demoralizi­ng defeat in a Georgia congressio­nal race widely seen as a referendum on Trump’s young administra­tion.

In the most expensive congressio­nal election in US history, Republican Karen Handel, a former Georgia secretary of state, defeated political newcomer Democrat Jon Ossoff by 4 percentage points on Tuesday in a suburban Atlanta district that Republican­s have held since the 1970s.

The special election, to fill the seat vacated by Tom Price after Trump appointed him health and human services secretary, did not change the balance of power in Washington where Republican­s control the White House and both chambers of Congress.

But it was a demoralizi­ng blow to Democrats hoping Georgia would be a breakthrou­gh for a party trying to harvest electoral victories from the grassroots anti-Trump activism seen in marches on Washington and boisterous crowds at town hall meetings around the country. The district was seen as within reach to Democrats because Trump won there last November by only 1 percentage point.

Democrats also lost a special election in South Carolina on Tuesday in a race Republican­s were widely expected to win. Democrats lost two other contested special elections earlier this year for Republican-held seats in conservati­ve Kansas and Montana. That makes the party 0-for-4 in this year’s races for Republican-held congressio­nal seats.

“Ossoff race better be a wake up call for Democrats — business as usual isn’t working,” tweeted Representa­tive Seth Moulton of Massachuse­tts. “We need a genuinely new message, a serious jobs plan that reaches all Americans, and a bigger tent.”

Several prominent Democrats said the party needed to rethink its approach heading into next year’s congressio­nal elections, when Democrats need to pick up 24 seats to regain control of the House of Representa­tives.

Senator Chris Murphy of Connecticu­t told MSNBC that Democrats needed to focus on economic growth and “get back to being a big tent party.”

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