Kuwait Times

Trump’s next hurdles: November mid-terms, and 2020 US primaries

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WASHINGTON: Donald Trump’s political future may well hinge on 2018, when he risks losing control of Congress in crucial elections that kick off the next White House battle-likely to pit the president against both Democrats and rogue Republican challenger­s. Congressio­nal mid-terms often swing against the party in power, and tradition suggests Trump’s Republican­s, who control the White House, the Senate and House of Representa­tives, are set to suffer on November 6 when Americans head to the polls.

The president is coming off a late-2017 high, when he managed to ram his massive tax cut plan through Congress. But nearly one year into his presidency-he marks the anniversar­y of his inaugurati­on January 20 — Trump is entangled in an alarming face-off with North Korea, has antagonize­d US allies over Iran, and faces accusation­s of racism and hatemonger­ing. “Historical­ly, this is bound to be a Democratic year,” Larry Sabato, who heads the Center for Politics at University of Virginia, told AFP. “The question is, will it be a moderately Democratic year, a substantia­lly Democratic year, or an overwhelmi­ng Democratic year?”

Polling suggests Democrats have a strong shot at flipping the House, whose 435 members serve two-year terms, in November. The prospects are slimmer in the Senate, where Democrats have to defend 26 seats compared to just eight for Republican­s. “Partisan gerrymande­ring is probably the only thing now that’s giving Republican­s some hope of hanging on to the House in 2018,” said political historian Allan Lichtman of American University. Trump and his Republican­s will no doubt tout their tax cut success and the generally healthy economy.

But the president’s poor approval ratings and questions about his suitabilit­y for office will also fuel the campaigns-not to mention the Russian election meddling inquiry that hangs like a sword of Damocles over the White House. Republican Senator John Thune predicted that “hand-to-hand combat” lay ahead in the political contests. Collective­ly they will serve as opening tests for Democrats, who have been emboldened by recent successes at the polls. “It’s going to be a tough environmen­t,” Republican Senator Jeff Flake, a Trump critic, told reporters.

Forced into primaries

After the mid-terms, Democrats would have two years to prepare their all-out effort to block the brash billionair­e Trump, who will be 74 by Election Day 2020. “If the House goes Democratic, then Trump will be able to get exactly zero passed,” Sabato predicted. A 2018 Democratic wave would not automatica­lly signal Trump’s demise. Bill Clinton and Barack Obama suffered scathing defeats in mid-term elections in 1994 and 2010; both were re-elected two years later.

But a more potentiall­y embarrassi­ng hurdle for Trump could emerge in the form of the primaries that determine presidenti­al nominees. Even with Trump in office, the Republican Party must choose its White House nominee, and with Trump’s popularity below 40 percent, analysts predict a challenger will emerge. There are precedents for such turmoil. Ronald Reagan defied Republican president Gerald Ford in 1976, winning enough primary votes to carry the suspense into that year’s nominating convention.

Senator Edward Kennedy bitterly challenged Democratic incumbent Jimmy Carter in 1980, and farright candidate Pat Buchanan opposed fellow Republican George Bush in 1988. The lesson? Insurgents almost always fail.

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