Trump heads on five-state rally blitz
amid Supreme Court chaos
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[September 29, 2018]
By Roberta Rampton
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President
Donald Trump on Saturday kicks off a week of rallies in five friendly
places around the country, seeking to shore up support ahead of
congressional elections even as the fate of his pick to fill a Supreme
Court vacancy remains unclear.
Republicans are at risk of losing control of Congress in the Nov. 6
elections, which could impede Trump's goals to clamp down on
immigration, cut taxes, approve new bilateral trade deals, and invest in
infrastructure.
Allegations of sexual misconduct against Trump's Supreme Court nominee,
Brett Kavanaugh, have complicated his confirmation proceedings,
disappointing conservative voters and energizing Democrats. Kavanaugh
denies the accusations.
Trump travels first to Wheeling, West Virginia on Saturday, where
Republicans are trying to unseat Democratic Senator Joe Manchin, one of
a handful of senators seen as key swing votes that will determine
Kavanaugh's appointment.
Trump will then hold evening rallies in Johnson City, Tennessee on
Monday; Southaven, Mississippi on Tuesday; Rochester, Minnesota on
Thursday; and Topeka, Kansas next Saturday.
The Trump campaign said the rallies are aimed at energizing volunteers
and supporters as Republicans try to protect and expand the majorities
they hold in the Senate and House of Representatives.
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"Control of Congress is so critical for his agenda that the president
will travel to as many states as possible as we head into the busy
campaign season," a Trump campaign spokesman said, declining to be
named.
A third of the Senate and all House seats are in play. Power could shift
if Democrats gain two Senate seats and 23 House seats.
Saturday's visit will be Trump's second in recent weeks to West Virginia
- a state he won by more than 40 percentage points in the 2016
presidential election - to campaign for Republican Senate candidate
Patrick Morrisey, who is trailing Manchin in polls.
"It's not a good sign for Morrisey that the president has to come to try
to give him a boost in the polls," said Simon Haeder, a political
scientist at West Virginia University.
Trump's next two stops will be in states he also won handily in 2016:
Tennessee, which he took by more than 20 points, and Mississippi, where
he won by 18 points.
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President Donald Trump arrives at Joint Base Andrews from New York,
in Maryland, U.S., September 27, 2018. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
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Tennessee's former governor Phil Bredesen and U.S. Representative
Marsha Blackburn are in a tight race for a Senate seat held by
retiring Republican Bob Corker.
In Mississippi, two Republicans and two Democrats are in a special
election primary battle for a Senate seat vacated by Republican Thad
Cochran. Trump has endorsed Cindy Hyde-Smith, who would need to win
50 percent of the votes to avoid a run-off on Nov. 27.
Although Trump narrowly lost Minnesota in 2016, he won in Rochester,
where he will be appearing on Thursday to support Republicans,
including Karin Housley, who is running for the Senate, hoping to
unseat Democrat Tina Smith. Smith was appointed to the seat last
year after former Democratic Senator Al Franken resigned after being
accused of sexual harassment.
In Kansas, a state Trump won by 20 percentage points, he will rally
support for Kris Kobach's gubernatorial campaign. Kobach, who serves
as the Kansas secretary of state, advised Trump's campaign on
immigration restrictions and has pushed for more restrictive voting
laws.
(Reporting by Roberta Rampton; editing by Sue Horton and Rosalba
O'Brien)
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