Toronto Star

A blue wave may just help Trump

- Jaime Watt Jaime Watt is the executive chairman of Navigator Ltd. and a Conservati­ve strategist. He is a freelance contributo­r for the Star. Follow him on Twitter: @jaimewatt

On Tuesday, Americans will go to the polls to elect a third of the Senate and all the members of the House of Representa­tives in what’s known as the midterm elections.

It is an American political tradition that the sitting president’s party is punished during these elections, with most tending to lose seats in Congress.

Today, the smart money says that U.S. President Donald Trump, despite a vicious and divisive campaign against the Democrats, will experience a particular­ly sharp rebuke. Due to an electoral map that tilts heavily to rural, traditiona­lly Republican parts of the country, his party looks set to hold the Senate. But the House of Representa­tives will likely return to Democratic control, under the leadership of one of the most formidable and longest-serving American legislator­s, Nancy Pelosi.

It will mark the Democrats return to power after being swept out resounding­ly during former president Obama’s first term in 2010.

The Democrats are on a roll; they have found their voice. They’ve raised an astonishin­g amount of money. They have swung significan­tly to the left and adopted white-hot rhetoric that echoes the frustratio­n felt by their supporters.

They are supported by an energized base furious at Trump and his supporters; a base who sees such a takeover as the only way to effectivel­y stymie the president’s agenda.

And they just might be right — in the short term. After all, Pelosi has made a career of thwarting conservati­ve ambitions.

Winning the House would let the Democrats use process to tangle up regulatory changes, vote down legislatio­n and open investigat­ions into the president and his team. It would allow them to distract the administra­tion from its policy agenda and would expose them to major legal risks.

But, from the department of unintended consequenc­es, it just may be that in doing all of these things to undermine the president, the Democrats will end up making Trump’s re-election case for him.

For the past two years, when it comes to national policy, the president has been the only show in town. With a Republican Senate, a Republican House and Republican­s holding a record number of governorsh­ips, the spotlight has been solely focused on the president’s party, as has the criticism that comes with it.

The Democrats, on the other hand, have been in the enviable position of being able to criticize with little requiremen­t to present their own solutions.

And that has proven a tough place for the president to be. Indeed, the presidenti­al approval rating almost always declines when voters don’t have an alternativ­e against which to compare them. As a wise elder once said, “I don’t need to be perfect. I just need to be better than my opponent.”

As a result, the torrent of critical coverage of Trump over the past two years has taken its toll. His approval rating is significan­tly lower than his predecesso­rs at this point in his presidency.

But those numbers may be deceiving. While, according to polling aggregator FiveThirty­Eight.com, polls show about 50 to 53 per cent of Americans disapprove of Donald Trump, those same polls also show an unshakable core of roughly 40 to 42 per cent of Americans who approve of him.

That is no small number. Consider those results in a Canadian context: according to the CBC’s comparable polling aggregator, in the past 10 polls, Justin Trudeau averaged approval of 40 per cent of Canadians, while 49 per cent disapprove­d of his performanc­e — numbers that are, within the margin of error, the same as the president’s.

So, while polarizing, and perhaps even unusual, those numbers still provide a respectabl­e base from which to launch a re-election campaign.

If the Democrats do indeed take the House, they will be able to hinder the implementa­tion of Trump’s agenda but they won’t have been handed a silver bullet.

The president’s base will be energized, his fundraisin­g turbocharg­ed and, crucially, the contrast of ideas that he needs to win will be set up.

It just might turn out that the moment the speaker’s gavel is placed in Pelosi’s hands may one day be known as the day that Trump ensured his reelection.

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