Former President Obama's emergence on the campaign trail will provide a fascinating split-screen with President Trump over the final weeks before the midterm elections, giving each party a powerful proxy leading up to Nov. 6. "I think it just illuminates the choice the American people have in the midterm election." – Vice President Pence on "Fox News Sunday," hailing strong economic indicators. Obama is committed to being on the road for Democrats following his inaugural campaign season address at the University of Illinois on Friday. He's filming get-out-the-vote videos, putting his name on fundraising mailers and campaigning in Southern California, a key region for progressives if they're going to take back the House. In his speeches, the 44th president has attacked Trump as corrupt, divisive, dangerous and bigoted, while warning Democrats against complacency and casting the election as their opportunity to "restore some semblance of sanity to our politics." "If we don't step up, things can get worse. In two months, we have the chance to restore some sanity to our politics. We have the chance to flip the House of Representatives and make sure there are real checks and balances in Washington." – Obama on Saturday at the Anaheim Convention Center The Associated Press: Obama tells voters to put Dems in charge or 'things can get worse.' The Hill: 7 times Obama swiped at Trump in return to the trail. Democrats, who had been irritated by Obama's absence, are suddenly thrilled to have the popular former president back in the mix (The Hill). In Washington, Obama's return reignited debate about his legacy. © Twitter
© Twitter
Trump will also spend many of the 56 days between now and Nov. 6 on the campaign trail, where he's touted the economy and warned about the direction the country would take if Democrats take the House and Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) becomes Speaker. The Hill: Trump gets good news on wages. The Washington Post: Blue-collar jobs grow at fastest rate in 30 years, fueling a hiring boom in pro-Trump enclaves. The New York Times: Trump claims credit for the economy. Not so fast, says Obama. The Wall Street Journal: Trump and lawmakers expected to reach funding deal on Monday to avoid a government shutdown. The president is publicly expressing confidence that Republicans are being underestimated, as they were in 2016. Election analysts, however, increasingly see a bloodbath for House Republicans in November. The Cook Political Report: Grim fall awaits GOP. The Washington Post: Trump dominates fall campaign landscape and is the only thing that matters. In a Sunday interview on New York's AM 970, Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna Romney McDaniel acknowledged that "Democrats have energy right now." "We have to match them step for step with their energy, dollar for dollar, in order to keep these majorities." – McDaniel The big question that's beginning to percolate is whether Democratic turnout will be great enough to propel them to a majority in the Senate, where the map is stacked against them. The Hill's Reid Wilson takes you through five election year surprises as November near. At the top of the list: Democrats may have a shot at Senate control (The Hill). More from the campaign trail … Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.) says he's thought about leaving the Grand Old Party (The Hill) … Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) is heading to Iowa (Politico) … Republican tax law takes center stage in Nevada Senate race (The Hill) … Trump adviser says Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) might lose reelection bid (The New York Times) … Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) betting ObamaCare will save him (The New York Times). |
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