Dayton Daily News

Trump, Pence trying to save GOP majority in Congress

- By Jamie Dupree Washington Insider

WASHINGTON — Apart from targeting a handful of U.S. Senate seats held by Democrats, top Republican­s mainly find themselves playing defense in the final weeks of the 2018 mid-term election campaign, working to protect the seats of GOP lawmakers in the House, as President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence criss-cross the country in a bid to keep both the House and Senate in GOP hands next year.

Four weeks from Election Day, President Trump was holding a campaign rally in Iowa – not for his 2020 re-election bid – but instead trying to bolster the chances of Rep. David Young, R-Iowa, one of two Iowa Republican­s whose seats could be in jeopardy on Election Day.

“I think we’re going to do well,” the president told reporters when asked Tuesday morning for a prediction for the mid-term elections, just a few hours before getting on Air Force One to head to Council Bluffs, Iowa, to make the case to GOP voters that they must get to the polls in November to help Young and other GOP candidates.

Trump was also using the Iowa visit to announce a new federal plan to lift restrictio­ns on ethanol use in gasoline, something that would be a boost to farmers in Iowa and the Midwest.

While the president was jetting to the Hawkeye State on Air Force One, Vice Pres- ident Pence was in Wash- ington, hosting fundraiser­s Tuesday for two Republi- cans, Columbus-area Rep. Troy Balderson – who won a narrow special election victory to Congress back in August – and Carol Miller, a West Virginia Republican trying to keep an open GOP seat in the House.

Those two events were almost a slow day of campaign work for Pence, who flew to Texas aboard Air Force Two on Monday to campaign with Rep. Pete Sessions, R-Texas, in Dallas, then made a fundraisin­g stop for Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and later flew to Missouri to help GOP state Attorney General Josh Hawley’s bid to defeat Sen. Clare McCaskill, D-Mo.

“This midterm may be the most important mid- term election of my life- time,” Pence said at a rally for Sessions, a veteran House Republican who is one of an unexpected­ly large group of GOP lawmakers who are working very hard to survive this year’s election.

In a mid-term year like 2018, the schedules of both the president and vice pres- ident paint an important picture for those trying to divine where things stand – as apart from a handful of races focused on incumbent Senate Democrats in Montana, Missouri, North Dakota and West Virginia – it’s clear much of their energy is being expended right now to preserve GOP seats in Congress, especially in the House.

New polling data released in recent days showed everything from a bump for Repub- licans in the wake of the fight over the Supreme Court nom- ination of Justice Brett Kavanaugh to a big lead for Democrats in broader survey of battlegrou­nd districts.

“I’d rather have 6-8 in-depth House district polls rather than a sample from 69 ‘battlegrou­nd districts,’” tweeted political expert Stuart Rothenberg, who is sticking with his gut feeling about November.

“Right now, the House still looks poised to flip party control while the Senate does not,” Rothenberg wrote in his latest column for the Hill newspaper. “That’s the way things have looked for months.”

President Trump and Vice President Pence hope to show Rothenberg and other pundits that they’re wrong about such prediction­s – the two men have less than a month to save those GOP majorities.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? The Ohio Statehouse.
GETTY IMAGES The Ohio Statehouse.
 ??  ?? Jamie Dupree
Jamie Dupree

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