Trump, Republicans try to keep grip on North Carolina congressional
district
Send a link to a friend
[September 10, 2019]
By Susan Cornwell
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - One of the most
expensive special elections for the U.S. Congress takes place on Tuesday
in North Carolina, with both major parties watching to see whether
President Donald Trump's Republican Party can keep its grip on a
long-held seat.
Democrats are hoping for an upset in North Carolina's sprawling 9th
Congressional District, where polls showed Republican Dan Bishop running
neck and neck with Democrat Dan McCready.
The suburban-rural area in the southeastern part of the state has been
represented by Republicans in Congress since the 1960s and voted for
Trump by about 12 percentage points in 2016. A special congressional
election was ordered after last year's voting was tainted by fraud.
Both Trump and Vice President Mike Pence flew to North Carolina on
Monday for last-minute campaigning with Bishop, a 55-year-old state
senator who has embraced Trump's policies and politics.
"You have a Democrat named Dan McCready, and he wants open borders, he
wants sanctuary cities, he's not going to protect your Second
Amendment," Trump told the cheering crowd at a rally in Fayetteville,
referring to the constitutional right to bear arms.
A Republican victory would help the party launch a comeback effort to
wrest the House of Representatives away from Democrats after losing 40
seats and overall control in House elections last year.
A Democratic win would send hopes soaring that 2018 was not necessarily
their high-water mark as they aim to lure more voters away from Trump
and his fellow Republicans in 2020 elections to Congress and the White
House.
The North Carolina contest is the second most expensive special election
for a House seat in U.S. history, according to the Center for Responsive
Politics, which said outside groups had spent more than $10.7 million to
fill the airwaves with ads.
Only a 2017 race in Georgia cost more, when Republican Karen Handel beat
Democrat Jon Ossoff in a $27 million blitz.
CLOSELY FOUGHT
North Carolina's 9th District was already getting more competitive in
2018, when McCready lost narrowly before state officials ruled the
election was tainted by an absentee-ballot fraud scheme that benefited
his then-opponent, Republican Mark Harris. A new election was ordered,
and Harris declined to run again.
[to top of second column]
|
North Carolina’s 9th District Republican candidate Dan Bishop (L)
and South Carolina Senator Lindsay Graham listen as U.S. President
Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally in Fayetteville, North
Carolina, September 9, 2019. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
Republicans nominated Bishop, who has campaigned on taxes, the
economy and immigration. He has echoed Trump's political themes,
asserting that McCready "admires socialism" and linking him to the
"Squad," a group of progressive Democrats in the House who Trump has
repeatedly attacked.
"I share your values. I'm not ashamed of your values," Bishop told
attendees at the rally with Trump on Monday. "I'm going to defend
your values in Washington D.C."
McCready, a 36-year-old small-businessman and U.S. Marine Corps
veteran, has sought to steer the campaign discussion away from Trump
and onto issues such as healthcare, education and teacher pay.
McCready met with fellow veterans in Fayetteville hours before
Trump's speech and talked about how Americans were getting "crushed"
by healthcare costs.
He has labeled Bishop, who sponsored a 2016 measure in the state
legislature restricting public restroom access for transgender
people, as a "career politician."
"I have a feeling you're as tired of the career politicians as I
am," McCready said in a debate last month. "We need people who have
done things, led Marines and built businesses."
A wave of recent Republican retirements from the House has fueled
speculation that Republicans fear they will not win back the
majority in that chamber next year. They will need to gain 19 seats
to regain the majority, or 20 if they lose North Carolina's 9th
District on Tuesday.
Republicans are expected to keep the seat in another special
election on Tuesday in the state's 3rd District. Republican Greg
Murphy and Democrat Allen Thomas are vying for a seat left vacant by
longtime Republican Representative Walter Jones’ death in February.
(Reporting by Susan Cornwell in Washington; Additional reporting by
Roberta Rampton in Fayetteville, North Carolina; Editing by Colleen
Jenkins and Peter Cooney)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|