FARGO, N.D. (AP) — President Donald Trump urged voters Wednesday to fire “liberal Democrat” Sen. Heidi Heitkamp in November, claiming that she promised to be an independent mind but instead has voted in lockstep with her party leadership and against his agenda.
Trump called instead for the election of Republican U.S. Rep. Kevin Cramer, one of his staunchest allies in Congress.
“When Heidi ran for office, she promised to be an independent vote for the people of North Dakota,” Trump said to an arena packed with thousands of cheering supporters in Fargo. “Instead, she went to Washington and immediately joined Chuck … and Nancy,” a reference to Democratic congressional leaders Sen. Chuck Schumer and Rep. Nancy Pelosi.
But Heitkamp, one of the most vulnerable incumbents seeking re-election this year, is considered a moderate and one of the least reliably partisan Democratic votes in the Senate. She’s largely backed the oil-rich state’s corporate interests on energy and has opposed some restrictions on guns. She voted to confirm 21 of Trump’s 26 Cabinet-level nominations.
The president, however, noted Heitkamp’s votes against tax cuts he signed into law in December as well as the GOP’s long-sought goal to undo the health care program enacted by President Barack Obama.
“You need a senator who doesn’t just talk like they’re from North Dakota but votes like they’re from North Dakota,” Trump bellowed. “That’s what you need and that is Kevin Cramer.”
Called to the microphone by the president, Cramer thanked Trump for rolling back federal regulations, cutting taxes and, “on behalf of the most vulnerable forgotten people, the unborn babies, thank you for standing for life.”
He pledged to always be with Trump.
“And on these very important North Dakota values, you never have to wonder where I’ll be because I’ll always be with them and with you 100 percent of the time,” Cramer said.
Heitkamp stood next to Trump at the White House when he signed a banking deregulation bill into law, alarming some Republicans who worried he was becoming too close to her. Trump also invited her to join him on stage with Cramer during a past appearance in North Dakota. At that event, Trump called her a “good woman” and said he hoped for her support. Heitkamp has described having a “friendly” relationship with Trump.
Trump urged the election of more Republican senators, saying the current 51-49 GOP majority is a “problem.” Most legislation needs 60 votes to get through the Senate, and Democrats have refused to go along with much of what Trump and the Republicans have proposed.
“It’s a very tough situation,” he said. Trump added that “we have to hold the House and maybe even increase it, and I think we’ll be able to do it.”
To that end, he pointed to primary election results Tuesday night that saw the surprise upset of House Democratic Caucus Chairman Joe Crowley of New York to Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a 28-year-old Latina who worked for Bernie Sanders’ presidential campaign.
He referred to Crowley, a Trump critic, as a “slovenly man” who “got his ass kicked by a young woman who had a lot of energy.”
Trump said he was happy that Pelosi and California Rep. Maxine Waters would remain the faces of the Democratic Party.
“I mean, (Waters) practically was telling people the other day to assault. Can you imagine if I said the things she said?” asked Trump, who has encouraged violence against protesters at his campaign rallies.
The president also mocked Democrats’ talk of a “blue wave” in November that will help their party take back the House, saying they “keep talking about this blue wave,” but “their blue wave is really sputtering pretty badly.”
Trump also touched on Wednesday’s announcement by Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy that he is retiring after 31 years on the bench, giving the president a second opportunity to put a justice on the high court and cement its conservative wing.
Trump said he has to name someone young enough “that’s going to be there for 45 years. We need intellect … so many elements go into the making of a great justice of the Supreme Court.”
He claimed that Heitkamp will vote against whomever he nominates to succeed Kennedy, despite her vote to approve Neil Gorsuch, Trump’s first nominee to the Supreme Court. But, referring to the rally, Trump said, “Maybe because of this she will be forced to vote ‘yes.'”
Trump spent the night in Milwaukee. He was set to speak Thursday at the ceremonial groundbreaking for a massive $10 billion Foxconn factory complex in Wisconsin and attend a closed-door fundraiser.
I think when Trump finally drops dead the parties thrown in some households will rival what they put together for New Year’s Eve.
There are folks who say that Heitkamp is going to flee the Democratic party in the upcoming Supreme Court nomination fight. I think that is bunk. Her best chance is to really gin up the abortion issue in her state. Now that it looks like the pro-abortion forces are going to win, we are going to discover that Roe v Wade has mostly propped up the Republican party all these years. Since the issue looks like it is going to be decided once and for all, the majority of voters who have been on the sidelines are going to assert themselves.
You have to understand abortion has been used as a culture war issue by the Republicans to secure an important part of their base, but Evangelical Christians don’t make up a majority in this country or even in most states. Once the majority realizes the courts don’t have their backs, they are going to be energized against the minority. Much of the history of the last 40 years has been based on a power dynamic that involved an indifferent majority who thought they had won in the Supreme Court and a red hot minority who thought they were on a Mission From God. Heat up the majority and the minority will lose again.
Dems need to win the Senate somehow, although I feel the prospects are minimal. But say they do eke out a slim majority, 51-49. Now you have Heitkamp and Joe Manchin lording over the majority and essentially calling the shots on every damned fight to be had. Having those two knuckleheads run the Senate would be almost as damned frustrating as the current situation.
Knuckleheads? They’re solid votes on most of the issues that are at the core of the Trump disaster; his wrecking of healthcare, the attack on minimum wage laws and working conditions, the criminality, the tax recklessness, the corporate giveaways.
RANSON, W.Va. — Joe Manchin wants you to know he really likes Donald Trump.
The West Virginia senator doesn’t put it quite that way. But more than any other Democrat in Congress, he’s positioned himself as a vocal Trump ally. In fact, the senator, up for reelection in a state Trump won by more than 40 points, told POLITICO he isn’t ruling out endorsing Trump for reelection in 2020 — a position practically unheard of for a politician with a “D” next to his name.
“I’m open to supporting the person who I think is best for my country and my state,” Manchin said this week from the driver’s seat of his Grand Cherokee, insisting he’s game to work with any president of either party. “If his policies are best, I’ll be right there.”
https://www.politico.com/story/2018/06/06/manchin-trump-west-virginia-midterms-626437