Houston Chronicle

Trump stoking fear as midterm elections near

Biggest targets: Democrats and migrant caravan

- Catherine Lucey, Zeke Miller and Jonathan Lemire

WASHINGTON — Mob rule. A socialist takeover. Terrorists marching on the U.S. border.

As President Donald Trump embraces the role of electoral boogeyman, he’s making closing arguments to midterm voters that increasing­ly resemble a Halloween horror story.

The candidate who won the White House in part by harnessing many Americans’ anxieties is offering dire warnings about what life would look like if Democrats gain control of Congress.

Using racially charged language and sometimes questionab­le informatio­n, Trump argues that Democrats will plunge the country into socialism, imperil the social safety net, raise taxes and welcome millions of people pouring into the U.S illegally.

“At stake in this election is whether we continue the extraordin­ary prosperity that we’ve all achieved, or whether we let the radical Democrat mob take a giant wrecking ball and destroy our country and our economy,” Trump said at a rally in Houston on Monday night. He’s warning of Democratic “mob rule” and predicting a stock market crash if Democrats retake control on Capitol Hill.

Trump’s doomsday prediction­s come as Republican­s seek to counter months of rising Democratic enthusiasm. The GOP has seen its own increase in energy since the politicall­y charged confirmati­on of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh. Party leaders now believe they can increase their majority in the Senate, although control of the House remains within Democratic reach. Trump is looking to minimize any losses with a pitch that echoes his dark 2016 campaign rhetoric.

In a post-Labor Day election briefing, GOP pollster Neil Newhouse warned the White House about an enthusiasm gap between Democrats and Republican­s. He suggested that the GOP emphasize to voters the potential consequenc­es of Democratic control of Congress on issues like abolishing U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t. Trump has taken that message to heart in recent weeks, White House aides say.

The scare tactics run the risk of motivating Democrats or turning off moderates in the suburban races that could decide the House majority. But the White House sees the fear factor as a winning strategy.

At rallies and on Twitter in recent days, he has focused on Central American migrants making their way to the southern U.S. border. The caravan is a “gift” to Republican­s, Trump believes. He’s told confidants that it is the party’s best closing argument heading into the midterms, according to a Republican close to the White House who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Trump believes the images of the caravan that have become a fixture on cable news networks — and particular­ly Fox News, the preferred network of his most loyal supporters — are riling up the same voters who turned out for him two years ago.

He has further heated up his rhetoric by suggesting, without presenting evidence, that the Democrats are behind the caravan and claiming that Middle Easterners — an apparent allusion to terrorists — are also in the traveling mass of migrants.

Trump’s White House is reinforcin­g the president’s dark view of life under Democratic leadership. On Tuesday, his Council of Economic Advisers issued a report on the costs of socialism that said the “Medicare for All” plan being promoted by some Democrats would harm economic growth.

At a recent campaign stop, Trump said: “Democrats support a socialist takeover of health care that would totally obliterate Medicare.”

Seeking to emphasize his “America First” approach to foreign policy, Trump went a step further than usual this week, condemning socalled globalists, and embracing the politicall­y fraught term of “nationalis­t.”

“You know what I am? I’m a nationalis­t, OK? I’m a nationalis­t. Nationalis­t. Nothing wrong. Use that word. Use that word,” Trump said.

 ?? Marie D. De Jesús / Staff photo ?? A Trump supporter wearing a mask waves a MAGA hat during the Houston rally Monday.
Marie D. De Jesús / Staff photo A Trump supporter wearing a mask waves a MAGA hat during the Houston rally Monday.

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