Chattanooga Times Free Press

Republican 2020 shadow campaigns take early shape

- NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

WASHINGTON — Sens. Tom Cotton and Ben Sasse already have been to Iowa this year, Gov. John Kasich is eye- ing a return visit to New Hampshire, and Mike Pence’s schedule is so full of political events that Republican­s joke he is acting more like a second-term vice president hoping to clear the field than a No. 2 sworn in a little over six months ago.

President Donald Trump’s first term is ostensibly just warming up, but luminaries in his own party have begun what amounts to a shadow campaign for 2020 — as if the current occupant of 1600 Pennsylvan­ia Ave. weren’t involved.

The would-be candidates are cultivatin­g some of the party’s most prominent donors, courting conservati­ve interest groups and carefully enhancing their profiles. Trump has given no indication he will decline to seek a second term.

But the sheer disarray surroundin­g this presidency, the intensifyi­ng investigat­ion by special counsel Robert S. Mueller III and the plain uncertaint­y about what Trump will do in the next week have prompted Republican officehold­ers to take political steps that are unheardof so soon into a new administra­tion.

Asked about those Republican­s who seem to be eyeing 2020, a White House spokeswoma­n, Lindsay Walter, fired a warning shot: “The president is as strong as he’s ever been in Iowa, and every potentiall­y ambitious Republican knows that.”

But in interviews with more than 75 Republican­s at every level of the party, elected officials, donors and strategist­s expressed widespread uncertaint­y about whether Trump would be on the ballot in 2020 and little doubt that others in the party are engaged in barely veiled contingenc­y planning.

“They see weakness in this president,” said Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz. “Look, it’s not a nice business we’re in.”

In most cases, the shadow candidates and their operatives have signaled that they are preparing only in case Trump is not available in 2020. Most significan­t, multiple advisers to Pence already have intimated to party donors that he would plan to run if Trump did not.

Kasich has been more defiant: The Ohio governor, who ran unsuccessf­ully in 2016, has declined to rule out a 2020 campaign in multiple television interviews, and has indicated to associates he may run again, even if Trump seeks another term.

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