USA TODAY International Edition

Ryan making final campaign swing

- Eliza Collins

WASHINGTON – Paul Ryan wants to hold onto the House if it’s the last thing he does. The retiring House speaker will hit the trail Monday for an aggressive final stretch of campaignin­g in an attempt to bolster more than two dozen vulnerable Republican­s and keep the House before he retires. Ryan’s travel plan, shared exclusivel­y with USA TODAY, has the speaker visiting a dozen states over the next three weeks. Ryan’s campaign tour will zigzag from New York to Kansas to North Carolina, including stops in between. He’ll end the campaign cycle back home in Wisconsin with a bus tour touting GOP candidates up and down the ballot. House Republican­s are defending dozens of seats across the country, including in some districts Donald Trump won by double digits. Democrats need to pick up 23 seats to wrest the House majority from Republican­s. Ryan’s tour across the eastern part of the country – he visited other regions earlier in the cycle – will take him to stump for some unlikely candidates, including multiple members of the House Freedom Caucus. The ultra-conservati­ve group has been a thorn in Ryan’s side during his tenure, often threatenin­g to sink legislatio­n members said was not conservati­ve enough. Ryan will spend some of his precious final days as speaker trying to make sure Reps. Dave Brat of Virginia, Rod Blum of Iowa and Ted Budd of North Carolina make it into the next Congress. Kevin Seifert, executive director of Ryan’s political operation, said the candidates for whom the speaker campaigns “support his agenda.” “The speaker knows that every Republican he is joining on the trail during this final sprint would offer better ideas than their Democrat opponents,” he said. Ryan will appear at various campaign events, including fundraiser­s, rallies and business tours, depending on the district. The majority of candidates for whom he will campaign are incumbents, but Ryan will help out a handful of Republican­s hoping to fill open red seats. Ryan’s team said these candidates were chosen because they are in competitiv­e races and the speaker has not visited their district. By the end of the cycle, Ryan will have campaigned for more than 55 candidates. Some of the members on Ryan’s list have been all but counted out by race handicappe­rs, but Ryan’s team said the speaker wouldn’t waste his time if the races weren’t winnable. “I think he’s very effective on the trail. You have to remember that Paul Ryan has a lot of campaign experience from being on the ticket with Romney,” said Rory Cooper, a Republican strategist who worked for former Majority Leader Eric Cantor. Ryan was Mitt Romney’s vice presidenti­al running mate in 2012. Some Republican­s worried – while Democrats hoped – that Ryan’s early retirement announceme­nt in April would turn off donors months before the midterms. That has not been the case. Ryan has continued to draw in cash for his party, raising more than $70 million as of the most recent filing. Much of that haul went to the Republican­s’ House campaign arm or to members directly. President Donald Trump has been a powerful motivator for conservati­ves, but in many battlegrou­nd districts, the candidate must also win over moderate Republican­s and independen­ts, groups not as convinced by the bombastic president. Ryan – who has a thoughtful, polished manner – could help more than a visit from the president in some of the most competitiv­e races. “There are very few places in the country where if you are a Republican, you’re not excited to see Paul Ryan,” said Michael Steel, a Republican strategist who worked for Ryan in 2012 and was an aide to former House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio. There are some districts where a visit from Trump “I imagine would not be a net positive,” Steel said, but Ryan has a general appeal to most Republican­s. Ryan may not elicit strong anger from Republican­s, but there are still some conservati­ves who have lingering reservatio­ns about the speaker after his frequent criticism of Trump during the 2016 campaign. Republican­s will need a strong showing from base voters in additional to moderates and independen­ts to win these seats, and it’s not clear if Ryan will be able to get them excited enough to show up to the polls. Ryan was elected speaker in 2015 when Republican­s were already in the majority, and it would burnish his legacy if they stayed there. The largest legislativ­e accomplish­ment under Ryan’s watch was an overhaul of the tax code last December. But polling shows the tax bill failed to boost Republican­s the way they hoped it would, even though many people saw more money in their paychecks. A Gallup poll released this month found that, nearly a year after the tax cuts passed, 39 percent of Americans approve of the overhaul, while 46 percent disapprove. Ryan is also tagged with the GOP’s failed attempt to repeal the Affordable Care Act. The House passed the legislatio­n in May 2017, but the Senate was unable to get it over the finish line that July. Democrats have seized on the issue this cycle, pledging to fix the flaws in “Obamacare” while targeting Republican attempts to take coverage away. “Most Republican­s in Congress are trying to run away from the agenda of the last two years, so bringing its author to their district is only going to remind voters of what they tried to do,” said Jesse Ferguson, a Democratic strategist who previously worked for the House Democrats’ campaign arm. “It’s like Republican­s looking to the captain of the Titanic to be your navigator. Given how intensely voters reject the health care repeal, I can’t imagine many Republican­s wanting to pal around with him,” Ferguson said. But David Barker, director of the Center for Congressio­nal and Presidenti­al Studies at American University, said both sides are spinning the visit to fit their narrative. If it does boost Republican­s, it will just be “marginally,” Barker said, adding that the tour’s itinerary could boil down to relationsh­ips. “There may be that element that they’re buddies or whatever, and these folks are humans, and they do favors for each other. Even if turns out to make not that big of a difference, there’s a perception that it does, and it can’t hurt, right?” Barker said. After 20 years in Congress, Ryan announced in April that 2018 would be his last year as speaker. He said he didn’t want his teenagers to know him as a “weekend dad.”

 ?? SCOTT OLSON/GETTY IMAGES ?? U.S. House Speaker Paul Ryan, second left, campaigns with GOP congressio­nal candidate Bryan Steil, second right, in Burlington, Wis.
SCOTT OLSON/GETTY IMAGES U.S. House Speaker Paul Ryan, second left, campaigns with GOP congressio­nal candidate Bryan Steil, second right, in Burlington, Wis.

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