The Peterborough Examiner

Grim warnings for White House, Republican­s ahead of election

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WASHINGTON — The prognosis for U.S. President Donald Trump and his party was grim.

In a post-Labour Day briefing at the White House, a top Republican pollster told senior staff that the determinin­g factor in the election wouldn’t be the improving economy or the steady increase in job creation.

It would be how voters feel about Trump. And the majority of the electorate, including a sizable percentage of Republican­leaning voters, doesn’t feel good about the president, according to a presentati­on from pollster Neil Newhouse that spanned dozens of pages.

Newhouse’s briefing came amid a darkening mood among Republican officials as the November election nears. Party leaders were already worried that a surge in enthusiasm among Democrats and disdain for Trump by moderate Republican­s would put the House out of reach. But some Republican­s now fear their Senate majority is also in peril — a scenario that was unthinkabl­e a few months ago given the favourable Senate map for the GOP.

“For Republican candidates to win in swing states, they need all of the voters who support President Trump, plus a chunk of those who do not,” said Whit Ayres, a GOP pollster. “That is threading a very narrow strategic needle.”

Operatives in both parties say Republican­s still have the edge in the fight for control of the Senate. But GOP officials are increasing­ly worried that nominees in conservati­ve-leaning states such as Missouri and Indiana are underperfo­rming, while races in Tennessee and Texas that should be slam-dunks for Republican­s are close.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell raised an alarm last week, warning that each of the competitiv­e Senate races would be “like a knife fight in an alley.”

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