San Francisco Chronicle

Trump uses Russia probe to hit critics

- By Ken Thomas Ken Thomas is an Associated Press writer.

WASHINGTON — President Trump is trying to turn the Russia investigat­ion into a rallying cry.

Far from avoiding talk of the accelerati­ng probe into his campaign’s ties to Moscow, Trump is instead using it to stoke the outrage felt by his most loyal supporters.

The investigat­ion, he argues, is an outgrowth of the bias and resentment media elites and Democrats hold against his white, working-class base. He casts the investigat­ion as a nefarious attempt to undo the results of the election and seize power from the voters who have been marginaliz­ed.

“They can’t beat us at the voting booths, so they are trying to cheat you out of the future and the future that you want,” Trump said at a Thursday night rally in Huntington, W.Va. “They are trying to cheat you out of the leadership you want with a fake story that is demeaning to all of us and, most importantl­y, demeaning to our country and demeaning to our Constituti­on.”

The message falls in line with Trump’s longstandi­ng appeal to the voters he has called the “forgotten men and women of our country” who lack a voice in government. Trump portrays himself as the voice of the aggrieved who understand­s their troubles.

But this heavy reliance on his loyal base — a bloc far short of an electoral majority — carries risks. Long term, it’s unclear how his message will appeal to mainstream Republican­s, some of whom are conducting investigat­ions into his Russia ties in Congress and are unlikely to see special counsel Robert Mueller, the by-the-book former FBI director and decorated Vietnam War veteran, as the face of a witch hunt.

The message also obscures the issue his base cares most deeply about: the economy. For now, Trump appears to be on solid ground on that front. He has presided over a strong economy during his first six months in office. He repeatedly noted last week that the stock market had risen to new heights. He pointed Friday to the latest job report, which showed more than 200,000 new jobs in July and an unemployme­nt rate of 4.3 percent, matching a 16year low.

But a slip in the nation’s economic fortunes before the 2020 election, especially in states key to Trump’s victory such as Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvan­ia, could make it harder for Trump to hold onto his base.

In some respects, Trump is taking a page from his favorite scapegoats: Bill and Hillary Clinton. During the late 1990s, Bill Clinton assailed House Republican­s and independen­t counsel Ken Starr as fierce partisans for pushing investigat­ions into his affair with a White House intern and his role in an Arkansas land deal. Hillary Clinton famously called it a “vast right-wing conspiracy.”

This time, Trump has taken the partisan argument to a new degree, parlaying it with his longstandi­ng indictment of the Washington “swamp” that he says hurts many Americans.

“He’s not just doing the partisan playbook, but he’s making it about the system in some ways going after him and going after what the voters wanted,” said presidenti­al historian Julian Zelizer, a professor at Princeton University.

 ?? Evan Vucci / Associated Press ?? President Trump is using the Russia investigat­ion to stoke the outrage felt by his most loyal backers.
Evan Vucci / Associated Press President Trump is using the Russia investigat­ion to stoke the outrage felt by his most loyal backers.

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