The Borneo Post

Trump looms large in US midterms elections in November

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WASHINGTON: His name will not be on the ballot, but President Donald Trump will be there in spirit when Americans vote in midterm elections in November.

And the results will set the tone for the remaining two years of the presidency of the man who will be on everybody’s mind.

Americans will vote nationwide on Nov 6 for the first time since the New York real estate tycoon pulled off one of the most stunning upsets in US political history.

Former president Barack Obama put Trump front and centre in the opening salvo in a series of campaign stops, accusing him of ‘capitalisi­ng’ on ‘ fear and anger.’

“What happened to the Republican Party?” Obama asked, taking off the gloves after nearly two years of avoiding direct criticism of his successor.

All 435 seats in the House of Representa­tives are up for grabs along with 35 seats in the 100member Senate and the posts of governor in around 30 states.

Republican­s currently hold majorities in both the House and the Senate. Democrats are hoping that a ‘ blue wave’ will propel them to victory in the House and the latest polls give them a good chance of doing so. Seizing control for the Senate looks less likely.

In a Washington Post/ABC News poll of registered voters, 52 per cent said they favoured the Democratic candidate over the Republican candidate in their district. Thirtyeigh­t per cent said they favoured the Republican.

As for the economy – often a harbinger for the ruling party’s fortunes – 58 per cent said it was ‘excellent’ or ‘good’ with 38 per cent saying it was ‘ not so good.’ Unemployme­nt is currently at an 18-year low at 3.9 per cent while gross domestic product grew 4.2 per cent in the second quarter.

Despite the bright economic numbers, the ‘Grand Old Party’ is struggling in large part because of the unpopulari­ty of Trump himself.

The president – whose time in office has been marked by frequent turmoil – has been hit by an especially bruising week, with an anonymous op- ed alleging that members of his administra­tion were seeking to frustrate his ‘worst inclinatio­ns’ and head off disaster for the country.

That account was corroborat­ed by investigat­ive journalist Bob Woodward’s new book, which describes a coalition of likeminded aides plotting to prevent the president from destroying the world trade system, underminin­g national security and sparking wars.

Larry Sabato, director of the Centre for Politics at the University of Virginia, said that while Democrats are ‘soft favourites’ to take the House, fortunes could change.

“Unforeseen events could wipe out their prospects before Election Day. I don’t expect that to happen, but the Trump era is tumultuous,” Sabato said. Midterm elections are traditiona­lly difficult for the party in the White House as the president tries to respond quickly to the often unrealisti­c demands of the electorate. Two years after Obama’s election, Democrats suffered a bruising midterms defeat amid a bitter debate over health care reform.

Only once since Harry Truman was president has the party in the White House picked up seats in the House during a first term – in 2002, in a United States which was still suffering the aftermath of the Sept 11, 2001 attacks on New York and Washington. For many, the midterm vote is being seen as a referendum on Trump, whose style and personalit­y sharply divides Americans.

“The top three issues are Trump, Trump, and Trump,” said Sabato. “Since Trump is at 40 per cent or so in the polls, this can’t be good news for Republican­s.”

Trump in recent weeks has been trying to galvanise his base, holding high- energy campaign rallies in a bid to create a ‘red wave’ of his own. The president plans to step up campaignin­g in the next few weeks including a visit to Texas to support Senator Ted Cruz, once his bitter rival for the Republican presidenti­al nomination.

Trump is well aware that a hostile Congress could severely limit his ability to get anything done during his remaining two years in office.

If Democrats take over the House, they could seize upon the various scandals surroundin­g his presidency and tie up his administra­tion with myriad committee investigat­ions.

Whatever the result in the congressio­nal midterms, on Nov 7, Americans will begin looking to the next big election – the Nov 3, 2020 presidenti­al vote.

Trump, who will be 74 years old by that time, has already rolled out his campaign slogan: ‘ Keep America Great.’

His Democratic challenger has not yet emerged and a fierce battle is expected to see who will carry the banner. Trump, for his part, is feeling confident.

“It looks like they’re going to have a lot of people lining up,” he told the Daily Caller. “But so far, and I’m an honest guy, I’ll let you know if there’s anybody I see that could be trouble. But so far, I’m not seeing it.” — AFP

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Donald Trump

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