San Francisco Chronicle

Trump extols Senate gains; threatens Dems

- By Jonathan Lemire, Catherine Lucey and Darlene Superville Jonathan Lemire, Catherine Lucey and Darlene Superville are Associated Press writers.

WASHINGTON — As Washington came to grips with its new divided reality, President Trump on Wednesday reveled in his party’s Senate victories, mocked members of his own party who lost after not seeking his support and even suggested he may be able to govern more effectivel­y after losing a chamber of Congress.

Trump faces the prospect, starting early next year, of endless investigat­ions after Democrats formally take control of the House, along with stymied policy efforts and fresh questions about the resilience of his unorthodox political coalition. Still, he celebrated Republican­s’ success in retaining the Senate and seemed to blame losing GOP candidates for distancing themselves from him and his unorthodox methods.

He took an unabashed victory lap and, despite the split decision, declaring in a freewheeli­ng, combative, 90-minute White House news conference that “I thought it was very close to complete victory.” He also belittled the number of high-profile Democrats, including his predecesso­r, who crisscross­ed the nation to support their candidates, while suggesting that he alone was responsibl­e for the Republican triumphs.

Though boasting that Republican­s appear likely to hold the highest number of Senate seats in 100 years, Trump was quick to distance himself from his party’s failure to maintain control of the House. In a remarkable scene, he called out defeated Republican­s by name — “Too bad, Mike” at one moment, “Mia Love gave me no love and she lost” at another — and blamed them for not embracing his agenda.

“Candidates who embraced our message of lower taxes, low regulation, low crime, strong borders and great judges excelled last night,” said Trump.

Trump suggested there could be room for bipartisan­ship, declaring that Democrats would be eager to work with him on issues like infrastruc­ture.

But the olive branch he extended was studded with thorns as he declared that Republican­s would retaliate if Democrats use their control of the House to issue subpoenas to seek his tax returns and investigat­e his business dealings, his Cabinet’s conduct and his campaign’s ties to Russia.

“They can play that game, but we can play it better. Because we have a thing called the United States Senate,” Trump said. “If that happens, then we’re going to do the same thing and government would come to a halt and we’re going to blame them.”

But the White House news conference was also quickly overtaken by Trump’s ongoing attacks on the media, as the president repeatedly flashed his temper as he insulted several reporters by name, interrupte­d their questions, ordered some to sit down and deemed one inquiry “racist.”

 ?? Evan Vucci / Associated Press ?? President Trump points to CNN’s Jim Acosta, as a White House aide tries to take a microphone from him.
Evan Vucci / Associated Press President Trump points to CNN’s Jim Acosta, as a White House aide tries to take a microphone from him.

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