Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Trump ends year plugging GOP

Losing in Congress fatal to ‘great wealth’ of ’17, he says

- ROS KRASNY, CHRISTOPHE­R FLAVELLE AND BEN BRODY

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump spent his New Year’s Eve focused on the coming midterm election year, touting his administra­tion’s accomplish­ments in an effort to boost congressio­nal Republican­s.

“Why would smart voters want to put Democrats in Congress in 2018 Election when their policies will totally kill the great wealth created during the months since the Election,” the president, who’s spending the holidays at his Palm Beach, Fla., club, said in a Twitter message on Sunday. “People are much better off now.”

The problems facing Republican­s in next year’s elections could be “enormous,” analyst Charlie Cook, whose assessment of the partisan outlook for House and Senate races is carefully watched across the political spectrum, wrote last month.

“The odds of them losing the House are now at least 5050,” Cook, editor and publisher of the Cook Political Report, wrote in a blog post Dec. 19.

Trump’s own lagging poll numbers add to the headwinds faced by every president halfway through his term. A RealClearP­olitics average of nine surveys between Dec. 12-29 put the president’s approval at 40 percent.

Of the 21 midterm Congressio­nal elections held since 1934, all but three saw the party occupying the White House lose seats in the House of Representa­tives, according to data compiled by the American Presidency Project at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

And those losses can be large. On average, the president’s party lost 27 House seats in midterm elections between 1934 and 2014, and the average first-term loss was 25 seats. In 2010, midway through President Barack Obama’s first term, Democrats lost 63 House seats.

Democrats need to win 24 additional seats to gain control of the House after the 2018 elections.

The trend in mid-term Senate elections also bodes poorly for Republican­s, though that trend is less stark than for the House and could be blurred because Democrats have so many seats to defend — 26 — out of the 34 races in 2018.

In the 21 midterm elections from 1934 through 2014, the party that held the White House lost an average of four Senate seats, according to data from the American Presidency Project. The party of the president gained Senate seats in just five of those 21 elections.

A recent poll showed that heading into the 2018 midterms, half of registered U.S. voters would prefer a Democratic-controlled Congress. That was the biggest advantage for Democrats since 2008 in the NBC News/Wall Street Journal survey of congressio­nal preference.

Democrats also had an early “intensity advantage” going into the midterms. Some 59 percent said they have a high level of interest in the next round of Congressio­nal races, compared with 49 percent of Republican­s, the poll showed. And those who disapprove­d of Trump tended to do so strongly.

More recently, an Economist/YouGov poll taken Dec. 24-26 showed Democrats up 44 percent to 36 percent in a generic Congressio­nal vote. Democrats had a 40 percent favorabili­ty rating against 30 percent for Republican­s.

Warning signs for Republican­s came in November’s elections, in which Democrats won the Virginia and New Jersey governor’s races and numerous down-ballot contests in what some saw as in part a referendum on Trump.

The upset victory by Doug Jones in the Alabama U.S. Senate special election in December also charged up Democratic voters. Jones was the first Democrat elected to the Senate from the deeply Republican Southern state in a quarter-century. Support for his opponent, Roy Moore, slipped after he was accused of preying on teenage girls when he was in his 30s, even though the former judge had vocal backing from Trump heading into the election.

Trump and Republican­s hope a rising economy and record stock prices will buoy the party in November’s races, although the condition of both by Election Day could shift.

Trump told reporters outside the New Year’s Eve party Sunday night at his private South Florida club that “it will be a fantastic 2018.”

The president says he thinks the stock market will continue to rise and that companies are going to continue to come into the U.S., even predicting a “record clip.”

The president regularly refers to the stock market in his comments, and on Sunday made the impossible-to-verify claim on Twitter that “If the Dems (Crooked Hillary) got elected, your stocks would be down 50% from values on Election Day.”

Trump tested out a line at a recent fundraiser — “how’s your 401(k) doing” — in a bid to bind his presidency to the rising stock market and voters’ pocketbook­s.

But only about 45 percent of private-sector workers participat­e in any employer-sponsored retirement plan, and the lower-income workers prominent among Trump’s political base are the least likely to hold money in such an account.

Trump’s low approval rating will help define the midterm races, which are partly “a measure of presidenti­al popularity,” Sabato said.

“That is precisely what will give the GOP heartburn all the way through November,” he said. “Many voters will want to limit and roadblock Trump. Voting Democratic is the way to achieve that.”

 ?? AP/CAROLYN KASTER ?? President Donald Trump, shown in this Dec. 24 photo, expressed support for congressio­nal Republican­s on Sunday.
AP/CAROLYN KASTER President Donald Trump, shown in this Dec. 24 photo, expressed support for congressio­nal Republican­s on Sunday.

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