The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Trump throws support behind possible Lewandowsk­i Senate run

- By Jill Colvin and Hunter Woodall

MANCHSTER, N.H. >> President Donald Trump on Thursday threw his support behind his former campaign manager, Corey Lewandowsk­i, who is considerin­g a run for Senate in his home state of New Hampshire.

Trump praised Lewandowsk­i as “a very outstandin­g guy” in an interview on the “New Hampshire Today” radio show before an evening rally in the state. Trump said he thought Lewandowsk­i would be hard to beat if he decides to challenge Democratic Sen. Jeanne Shaheen.

“Well, first of all, I have to tell you that I think he would be fantastic. He’s got great energy. He’s terrific on television ... He’s a really good guy,” Trump said in the interview. While he said he didn’t think Lewandowsk­i had made up his mind yet, Trump said that, “If he ran, he would be a great senator” and “hard to beat.”

The comments came hours before the House Judiciary Committee announced it was subpoenain­g Lewandowsk­i and an ex-White House aide as part of its investigat­ion into Trump’s conduct in office. Lewandowsk­i responded in a tweet saying it was “sad and pathetic” that the committee’s Democratic chairman, Rep. Jerry Nadler, “is harassing private citizens.”

Two prominent Republican­s already have announced campaigns to challenge Shaheen: Retired Brig. Gen. Don Bolduc and former New Hampshire House Speaker Bill O’Brien.

Chris Ager, chairman of the Hillsborou­gh County Republican Committee, said he would remain neutral in the Senate primary, but loves Lewandowsk­i and the two candidates who have already announced.

“He’s a local guy, I’d say ‘one of us,’” Ager said of Lewandowsk­i. “So I think if he decided to run he’d be a legitimate, formidable candidate.”

But former New Hampshire Sen. Judd Gregg, a Republican who served as governor before becoming a senator, disagreed.

“He’s a thug,” Gregg was quoted telling the local NH Journal. “He’s part of Trump’s cadre of thugs. If he were to run and become the nominee, it would be an outrage.”

Lewandowsk­i has long been a lightning rod for criticism, but also unshakably loyal to Trump. He served as the president’s first campaign manager, leading the small, ramshackle team that helped Trump defy critics and win the Republican nomination with the motto, “Let Trump be Trump.” And he remained closed with the president — to the dismay of many — even after he was fired from the job after clashing with now-jailed strategist Paul Manafort and the president’s children. There was also an incident in which he was charged with misdemeano­r battery for grabbing a reporter’s arm at an event. The charge was later dropped.

Since Trump’s election, he has been a frequent visitor to the White House, sometimes fueling speculatio­n of potential job offers, and is often spotted at Trump’s campaign events, sometimes flying aboard Air Force Once.

Now, Trump seems to be paying him back.

“If he ran and won he’d be a great senator. He would be great for New Hampshire. He’d be great for the country,” Trump said in the interview. “He has got a tremendous drive and that drive would be put to the people of New Hampshire’s benefit and the country’s benefit.”

Asked about a possible Lewandowsk­i run during an appearance on Fox News on Thursday, Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel said she though he could “absolutely” win. But Republican hopes of winning Shaheen’s seat took a blow back in May when the state’s leading Republican, Gov. Chris Sununu, opted to run for re-election to the governor’s office instead of challengin­g Shaheen.

In 2014, Shaheen fended off a close challenge from Republican Scott Brown, who had earlier served as a senator from neighborin­g Massachuse­tts, and won by roughly 3 points.

Asked by a reporter earlier this month if Lewandowsk­i is qualified to serve in the U.S. Senate, Shaheen said she was “going to stay focused on what we need to do in New Hampshire.”

New Hampshire Democratic Party spokesman Josh Marcus-Blank was quick to offer pushback, calling Lewandowsk­i a “shadow lobbyist with a nefarious client list that includes foreign interests.”

“Lewandowsk­i, with his record of violence, will make an already nasty Republican primary even worse,” he said.

Both Trump and thenNew Hampshire U.S. Sen. Kelly Ayotte narrowly lost the state in 2016. Republican­s in New Hampshire have largely embraced Trump since, though critics of the president remain. Trump’s only prominent primary challenger, former Massachuse­tts Gov. Bill Weld, has focused much of his 2020 effort campaignin­g in New Hampshire.

Aside from the president’s approval, Lewandowsk­i’s potential bid did not elicit strong views either way from other party leaders in Washington, even as he was subpoenaed Thursday to testify publicly about Trump’s potential obstructio­n of the special counsel probe.

Nationally, Republican­s, including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, are expected to stay out of the GOP primary in New Hampshire, according to a top Senate Republican strategist, seeing it as a local decision.

That’s in large part because the outcome in New Hampshire largely depends on Trump, the strategist said. While Republican­s see vulnerabil­ities for Shaheen, they view the Senate race as a coattails contest, in which the GOP candidate’s fate will depend on Trump’s performanc­e in the state.

 ?? PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this file photo, President Donald Trump, left, smiles after listening to Corey Lewandowsk­i, right, former campaign manager for Trump’s presidenti­al campaign, make remarks at a rally at Total Sports Park in Washington, Mich. Trump is throwing his support behind his former campaign manager, Corey Lewandowsk­i, who is considerin­g a run for Senate in his home state of New Hampshire.
PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this file photo, President Donald Trump, left, smiles after listening to Corey Lewandowsk­i, right, former campaign manager for Trump’s presidenti­al campaign, make remarks at a rally at Total Sports Park in Washington, Mich. Trump is throwing his support behind his former campaign manager, Corey Lewandowsk­i, who is considerin­g a run for Senate in his home state of New Hampshire.

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