The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Republican­s fret about Trump re-election

Trump legal troubles unnerving supporters

- By Jonathan Lemire, Alan Fram and Elana Schor

WASHINGTON >> President Donald Trump’s intensifyi­ng legal troubles are unnerving some of his fellow Republican­s. Despite his brash stance, they believe the turmoil has left him increasing­ly vulnerable as he gears up for what is sure to be a nasty fight for re-election.

Trump, ever confident of his ability to bend story lines to his will, mocks the investigat­ions into his conduct as candidate and president as a “witch hunt” and insists he will survive the threats.

But a shift began to unfold over the weekend after prosecutor­s in New York for the first time linked Trump to a federal crime of illegal hush payments. That left some of his associates fearful that his customary bravado is unwarrante­d. For some Republican­s, the implicatio­n that the president may have directed a campaign finance violation, which would be a felony, could foreshadow a true turning point in the Republican relationsh­ip with him when special counsel Robert Mueller releases his report on the Russia investigat­ion.

“I’m sure there’s going to be a lot more that’s going to come out from the Southern District (of New York) and from, at some point, from the Mueller investigat­ion as well,” Sen. John Thune of South Dakota, the chamber’s incoming No. 2 Republican, said Monday. “What they’re implying there, obviously, is something I assume at some point the president will have an opportunit­y to respond to.”

Thune continued: “Campaign finance violations are something that ... they are serious matters, but obviously it depends a little bit on how it gets treated.”

As legal drama plays out, political challenges that could threaten Trump’s re-election are piling up.

Republican­s are still coming to terms with their drubbing in last month’s House elections and looking for someone to blame. The departure of John Kelly as White House chief of staff has set off a disorganiz­ed search for a replacemen­t who could stay in the job through the 2020 campaign. After Trump’s top choice, the vice president’s chief of staff Nick Ayers, passed on the job, few of the remaining candidates have political experience.

Also, Democrats will soon take control of the House of Representa­tives, wielding subpoena power and potentiall­y exploring impeachmen­t proceeding­s. Meanwhile, financial markets have been jittery, in part because of Trump’s trade wars and concerns that higher borrowing costs could ultimately trigger a recession.

Facing pressure from Mueller and an impending onslaught of Democratic investigat­ions, Trump could hew even further to the right, catering exclusivel­y to the base of voters he is concerned about losing, according to a Republican close to the White House who has consulted on the early re-election efforts. That instinct would echo the president’s double-down, scorchedea­rth response to the crises that hit his 2016 campaign, including the Access Hollywood tape about forcing himself on women, and could make it harder to woo the independen­t voters or disaffecte­d Democrats he may well need.

Could Trump face a primary election challenge from within his own party? He doesn’t seem concerned.

The president is eager to unleash his re-election machinery and begin to collect pledges of loyalty from across the GOP to quell any hint of an insurrecti­on, according to a campaign official and a Republican familiar with the inner workings of the campaign but not authorized to speak publicly.

The Trump team discussed challenges from someone such as outgoing Ohio Gov. John Kasich or Arizona Sen. Jeff Flake.

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 ?? ANDREW HARNIK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump speaks at a 2018 Project Safe Neighborho­ods National Conference in Kansas City, Mo. Trump’s growing legal peril has unnerved Republican­s who believe the turmoil has left the president increasing­ly vulnerable as he gears up for what is sure to be a nasty fight for re-election.
ANDREW HARNIK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump speaks at a 2018 Project Safe Neighborho­ods National Conference in Kansas City, Mo. Trump’s growing legal peril has unnerved Republican­s who believe the turmoil has left the president increasing­ly vulnerable as he gears up for what is sure to be a nasty fight for re-election.

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