USA TODAY US Edition

Confident Trump looks to life after midterms

- Susan Page and David Jackson Contributi­ng: John Fritze

HOUSTON – President Donald Trump loves a rally.

The bigger the crowds, the more he believes his increased presence on the campaign trail in recent weeks is generating “spirit” and brightenin­g Republican prospects in what many predict will be a rough midterm election for the GOP.

As he flew to Houston late Monday for a rally to support Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, he proudly showed USA TODAY a livestream on an aide’s smartphone picturing thousands of supporters winding their way into the Toyota Center, home of Houston Rockets.

“I have the same feeling that I had in 2016,” he said. “I think we’re going to do well.”

Trump has repeatedly expressed optimism Republican­s would not only hold their Senate majority but perhaps expand it – in large part because of his events in battlegrou­nd states including Montana, Nevada, North Dakota and Indiana. By Election Day, he likely will have held more than 30 rallies and fundraiser­s in the final five weeks of the campaign, a number exceeding the midterm activity of predecesso­rs Barack Obama and George W. Bush.

But as he embarks on nearly nonstop campaignin­g, Trump is also looking ahead to the possibilit­y of having to reckon with Democratic control of at least one chamber of Congress – an outcome that will almost certainly stall his legislativ­e agenda and could also put his very presidency at risk.

Polls point to at least a dozen highly competitiv­e Senate races, and nonpartisa­n political prognostic­ators note that most presidents lose at least a few House seats in their first midterm. But Trump has always publicly scoffed at polls and prediction­s, relying instead on his own brand of political intuition.

Is the midterm election a referendum on his presidency?

“No, but I think I’m helping,” he replied in an interview.

President Ronald Reagan, whom he said he admires, couldn’t have drawn such enormous crowds, he said, not to mention Hillary Clinton, whom he disparaged. “She couldn’t fill up a conference room in a hotel,” he said.

He says he can work with Dems

In a wide-ranging interview as his plane descended into Houston, the president touched on immigratio­n, the economy and his thoughts on how Saudi Arabia has handled the death of journalist Jamal Khashoggi. All those issues could play into the midterms, but none may carry as much weight as how voters feel about the president himself.

His approval rating has been underwater in every poll since August, though he remains popular with Republican­s despite controvers­ies and turnover that have beset his White House. And while he expresses confidence in the GOP’s chances, he has also had to look to the possibilit­y of a divided Congress.

Trump was less bullish on the House than the Senate, though he said there was “a very good chance” Republican­s might maintain control of both. “The map” wasn’t as friendly in the House, he said, adding that whichever party won a majority was likely to have only a nar- row one – and that he could do business with a House controlled by Democrats.

If Democrats capture the House in November, it would fundamenta­lly change the political landscape. Democratic leaders have sought to downplay talk of launching an impeachmen­t, but top-ranking Democrats have indicated they would take a more aggressive stance investigat­ing the White House.

Trump acknowledg­ed that a possible Democratic majority might try to impeach him. But he warned that the effort could rebound against them politicall­y, as it did for Republican­s who impeached President Clinton in 1998.

A more aggressive posture would almost certainly stall Trump’s attempts to advance a legislativ­e agenda – on immigratio­n, his proposed border wall or new middle-class tax cuts.

One possible area of agreement with Democrats, Trump said: an infrastruc­ture bill. He said he would be willing to negotiate a plan for publicly funded infrastruc­ture projects, not the publicpriv­ate combinatio­n that was a point of controvers­y with Democrats in the administra­tion’s previous infrastruc­ture plan. That idea died over the course of his first year in office, failing to capture much attention from either party.

“If the Democrats get in, I think I will be able to work with them,” he said. “They want infrastruc­ture. So do I.”

There’s little looking ahead

Many other areas of Trump’s postelecti­on presidency remained murky.

He declined to discuss whether Attorney General Jeff Sessions or Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein would be leaving the administra­tion after the elections. Many GOP allies of the president have predicted one or both will be gone after votes are counted, bringing to a close the often publicly awkward relationsh­ip Trump has had with his top Justice Department appointees.

Another factor that could have significan­t consequenc­es for the second half of Trump’s first term: the investigat­ion into Russian influence in the 2016 election. Trump said he had no idea what special counsel Robert Mueller would do next. “All I can tell you is I did nothing wrong,” he said.

But for now there is little talk of or time for looking ahead. Working with Democrats doesn’t play well to an audience of thousands at a Trump rally.

The Houston arena, with a capacity of just over 18,000, was jammed as Trump started to speak. His remarks brought boos at the mention of Democrats, jeers when he derided the “fake-news media” and chants of “Build that wall!”

“If you don’t want to be saying ‘Speaker Nancy Pelosi’ for the next two years,” Trump declared, “then you need to go out and vote for these tremendous Republican lawmakers.”

 ?? LARRY W. SMITH/EPA-EFE ?? President Trump rallies the troops Monday night at a campaign rally in Houston.
LARRY W. SMITH/EPA-EFE President Trump rallies the troops Monday night at a campaign rally in Houston.

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