Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

DECISION DAY ARRIVES

Trump, Democrats make final pushes with control of Congress on the line

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An epic battle for control of Congress and the future of Donald Trump’s presidency was wrapping up Monday as both parties made their final appeals to voters.

Reprising his frantic campaignin­g during the final days of his 2016 race, Trump was barnstormi­ng the country with rallies in Ohio, Indiana and Missouri, returning to the White House well after midnight.

Democrats in Congress were poised to make gains in the House, seeking to flip 23 seats to regain control of the chamber and serve as a check on Trump’s policies. The party’s task was much more difficult in the Senate, where Republican­s hold a narrow 51-49 majority but Democrats are defending 10 seats in states won by the president two years ago.

The two parties also were tangling in several crucial governors’ races, including in Midwest battlegrou­nd states such

as Wisconsin, Ohio, Iowa and Michigan. Florida and Georgia, meanwhile, could make history by electing their states’ first black governors — and leading Democrats such as former President Barack Obama made special pitches for Andrew Gillum in Florida and Stacey Abrams in Georgia in the final days.

Here’s a look at midterm campaign activities on Monday.

Trump

Campaignin­g in Ohio, Trump declared that “everything is at stake” as he sought to bolster the campaign of Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine, the Republican candidate for governor.

In Cleveland, Trump bashed DeWine’s Democratic opponent, Richard Cordray, whom he declared “a bad person” who “has hurt a lot of people.”

Earlier in the day, Trump said during a teletown hall organized by his re-election campaign that the media would treat the midterm results as a referendum on his presidency.

“Even though I’m not on the ballot, in a certain way I am on the ballot,” Trump said. “The press is

very much considerin­g it a referendum on me and us as a movement.”

The president asserted that if Democrats win, they will work to roll back everything he’s tried to accomplish during his first two years as president. “It’s all fragile,” he said on the call.

Trump was holding get-out-the-vote rallies in Fort Wayne, Indiana, and Cape Girardeau, Missouri, where he was being joined by special guest Rush Limbaugh.

Obama

Bearing boxes of doughnuts, former President Barack Obama and Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine made a surprise visit to a Fairfax, Virginia, campaign office to visit with volunteers working to generate a large voter turnout.

Obama, still hoarse from days of campaignin­g, told volunteers that issues like health care and opportunit­ies for working families are “on the ballot,” along with the nation’s character. “Who we are is on the ballot,” he said.

“You’re going out there, you’re going to make sure that people vote to start making things better,” Obama said. “And when you do that, then the spirit of America is going

to shine. Alright? Let’s get to work.”

The former president campaigned in recent days in Florida, Georgia, Indiana and Illinois for a slate of Democrats running in key Senate and gubernator­ial races.

The event brought Obama back together with Kaine, a former Virginia governor who was among the first elected officials in the nation to endorse his presidenti­al campaign in 2008.

Fox appeal

Trump penned an election-eve op-ed running on the Fox News website.

The piece on the president’s favorite news channel’s website urges voters to keep Republican­s in power to keep the economy growing.

Trump writes that “America faces a critical choice” in Tuesday’s midterm elections and claims that Democrats, if they win control of Congress, will “take a giant wrecking ball to your economy and your future.”

The message has been part of the president’s closing argument, but it has been overshadow­ed by his focus on hard-line immigratio­n issues in the final days of the campaign.

Some Republican­s worry that Trump’s decision not to focus more

on the economy has been detrimenta­l, especially among suburban, college-educated women who could determine control of the House.

Ga. governor

The battle for Georgia governor intensifie­d in its final hours as Abrams, the Democrat, and Republican Brian Kemp framed the race as a stark choice for the state and prepared for another month of campaignin­g if no one wins a majority.

Abrams slammed Kemp as a “bald-faced liar” who abused his powers as the sitting secretary of state when he suggested over the weekend, without offering evidence, that the Georgia Democratic Party tampered with the state’s online voter database.

Kemp insisted there was reason to suspect a hacking attempt, but declined to give details.

“I’m not going to get into the specifics of the investigat­ion,” Kemp told reporters. “But I can tell you I would not be calling Homeland Security, the FBI and the GBI unless we had informatio­n that we needed them to look at.”

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump speaks during a rally Monday at the IX Center in Cleveland.
CAROLYN KASTER — ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump speaks during a rally Monday at the IX Center in Cleveland.

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