North Dakota rep: Trump wants me to run for Senate

In a phone call this week, President Trump personally urged Rep. Kevin CramerKevin John CramerRepublicans prepare to punt on next COVID-19 relief bill GOP senators introduce resolution opposing calls to defund the police Trump tweets spark fresh headache for Republicans MORE (R-N.D.) to jump in the race against North Dakota Sen. Heidi HeitkampMary (Heidi) Kathryn Heitkamp70 former senators propose bipartisan caucus for incumbents Susan Collins set to play pivotal role in impeachment drama Pro-trade group launches media buy as Trump and Democrats near deal on new NAFTA MORE, a vulnerable Democrat whom Trump’s been courting on tax reform and other issues.

“He strongly encouraged me to run,” Cramer told The Hill in an interview Friday outside the Capitol.

“We talked about tax reform a lot. That was the first topic and the last topic,” Cramer said of the Tuesday phone call. But the congressman added: “I think he wanted to talk about the Senate race.

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“I told him I won’t do anything before tax reform,” Cramer recounted. “And [Trump] said, ‘That’s a good idea.’ ”

Cramer has been discussing his phone call with Trump with local media outlets. He confirmed Friday he will vote “yes” on the GOP tax bill, which House Republicans unveiled on Thursday.

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As North Dakota’s at-large House member, Cramer is the Peace Garden State’s sole representative and someone who has already proven he can win a statewide race. He won his third term in the House in 2016.

The phone call from Trump is a big boost for Cramer; Trump is enormously popular in North Dakota and beat Democrat Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonWhite House accuses Biden of pushing ‘conspiracy theories’ with Trump election claim Biden courts younger voters — who have been a weakness Trayvon Martin’s mother Sybrina Fulton qualifies to run for county commissioner in Florida MORE by 36 percentage points. In December, Trump interviewed Cramer for a Cabinet post, but the congressman ultimately didn’t get the job.

If he runs, Cramer would face off in the GOP primary with state Sen. Tom Campbell, who announced his bid in August.

The president’s comments to Cramer are notable given that Trump has been courting Heitkamp, hoping to pick up a Democratic vote for his sweeping plan to overhaul the U.S. tax system.

In September, Trump and Heitkamp traveled together on Air Force One to North Dakota. At an event at an oil refinery in Mandan, N.D., Trump invited Heitkamp to join him on stage.   

“Everybody’s saying, ‘What’s she doing up here?’ ” Trump told the crowd. “But I’ll tell you what: Good woman.”

Team Trump deflects blame after election losses

The White House was in damage control mode on Wednesday as it sought to deflect blame for Tuesday’s sweeping electoral losses and reassure Republicans who fear President Trump’s unpopularity will cost them at the polls in 2018.

Democrats view Tuesday as the start of a nationwide voter uprising against Trump. The party coasted to victory in governor’s races in Virginia and New Jersey, while cutting into GOP majorities in statehouses across the country.

A person familiar with the president’s political operation dismissed the notion that an anti-Trump wave is building, arguing that Democrats had merely held on in states they were expected to win. New Jersey is a deep-blue state, and Virginia has gone for the Democrat in the last three presidential elections.

ADVERTISEMENTThe person chalked up GOP losses to history, noting that the party that controls the White House typically struggles in off-year gubernatorial races. 

Local dynamics also played a part, the person said. New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie’s (R) unpopularity dragged down his lieutenant governor’s bid to succeed him, the person argued, adding that Virginia GOP gubernatorial nominee Ed Gillespie had lost a Senate race only three years earlier.

Trump’s historically low approval rating and liberal anger at the president played no part in driving the Democrats’ blockbuster turnout on Tuesday night, according to the president’s team.

“This is not about the president,” the person said.

Aides downplayed the importance of New Jersey and Virginia for the GOP in the 2018 and 2020 elections. 

“These are blue states that the president didn’t win last year, and candidly the results weren’t even close last year in either of the states.”

Team Trump’s reading of the political landscape is unlikely to calm nervous Republicans, who quickly blamed the president and mused about whether their control of Congress would be short-lived.

Republican Rep. Scott Taylor (Va.) told The Hill that the GOP’s losses were a “referendum” on the Trump administration.

“There has to be some self-reflection at the top and how that’s spilling over in the down ballot,” Taylor said. “I know they would tout the four congressional special elections we won, that’s a little bit different. That’s a localized thing. We under-performed in places that we should have crushed as Republicans. … When you look at tonight in Virginia and the results that continue to come in … [our] leaders need to have some self-reflection.”

It was clear on Wednesday that Trump and his advisers were still searching for answers after the blowout on Election Day. 

Trump immediately sought to separate himself from Gillespie, who lost to Lt. Gov. Ralph Northam (D) by 9 points, saying he failed to fully “embrace” what his administration stands for. Trump sought to reassure Republicans that better days lay ahead, pointing to their four special-election victories this year in the House and declaring that the economy is “doing record numbers.”

That assessment appeared to contradict the argument of his own political team that the president was not a factor in the losses.

The source familiar with the operation said if any national political dynamic affected the race, it was that swing voters backed Democrats because they were frustrated by the “lack of action by Congress” on Trump’s agenda.

But the sentiments from the White House are unlikely to reassure GOP officials and donors, who fear electoral disaster awaits them in 2018.

Democrats need to flip 24 seats to reclaim the House, and it appears like that could be within reach.

So far, 29 GOP House members have announced they will not seek reelection, giving Democrats new opportunities to pick up seats.

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Republicans are nervously eyeing Trump’s approval rating, which sits at historic lows at this point for a first-term president. They are also well aware that midterm elections are notoriously unkind to the party in power.

Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna Romney McDaniel cautioned candidates against running away from the president.

She argued that the RNC had raised more than $100 million in 2017 — doubling-up their counterparts at the Democratic National Committee — and said Trump’s supporters make up the most engaged and energetic part of the conservative electorate.

“I will always say to any candidate in our party, the greatest enthusiasm in our party right now is for President Trump,” she said on Fox News. “We’re seeing it through the fundraising numbers, we’re seeing it across the country. I see it as party chair, I absolutely think any candidate should be embracing the president.”

Speaker Paul RyanPaul Davis RyanBush, Romney won’t support Trump reelection: NYT Twitter joins Democrats to boost mail-in voting — here’s why Lobbying world MORE (R-Wis.) said the election results increase the sense of urgency for the Republican-held Congress to pass its agenda. Republican candidates will be tied to Trump whether they want it or not, Ryan said on “Fox & Friends.”

“We already made that choice,” he said. “We’re with Trump. We already made that choice. That’s a choice we made at the beginning of the year. That’s a choice we made during the campaign, which is we merged our agendas. … We all agreed on that agenda. We’re processing that agenda.”

Trump’s allies are rallying behind him. They quickly pinned the blame on Gillespie, whose resume is stocked with establishment credentials. The former lobbyist was once an adviser to President George W. Bush and served as chairman of the Republican National Committee.

“Tonight proves you can’t put lipstick on an establishment pig,” said Andy Surabian, an adviser to former White House chief strategist Stephen Bannon.

Bannon’s news outlet Breitbart brimmed with anti-establishment anger at Gillespie.

“Republican Swamp Thing Gillespie Rejected,” said one headline, which described the “milquetoast” former RNC chairman as an “establishment Republican tactician.”

The Breitbart wing believes that Gillespie’s loss bolsters their argument that nominating Trump Republicans — not establishment figures — is the way forward for the GOP. 

Bannon is recruiting challengers to run against nearly every Republican facing reelection in the Senate, which has many in the party worried that they’ll nominate unelectable far-right candidates or that incumbents will limp into the general election.

Those close to Trump’s political team, which is led by White House political director Bill Stepien, legislative affairs director Marc Short and Vice President Pence’s chief of staff Nick Ayers, claim they’re not sweating any of it yet. 

They flatly dismissed the exit poll data that found Gillespie getting crushed in the Virginia suburbs and losing the college-educated white voters that Trump had won there only a year ago.

The onus for the 2018 elections hangs squarely on Congress passing the president’s agenda, the official said, because there are only a “limited number of things a president can do to move a race.”

Cruz’s Democratic challenger officially files for Senate

Rep. Beto O’Rourke (D-Texas) has officially filed to challenge Sen. Ted CruzRafael (Ted) Edward CruzSenate advances public lands bill in late-night vote The Hill’s Morning Report – Trump’s public standing sags after Floyd protests GOP senators introduce resolution opposing calls to defund the police MORE (R-Texas) in 2018.

O’Rourke, who has served in Congress since 2013, announced in late March that he would take on Cruz next year. It’ll be an uphill battle for O’Rourke, since no Democrat has won a Senate election in Texas since 1988.

“Today’s filing is not only a chance to recommit ourselves to this critical race, but to recommit to running it in the right way: being present, accountable, candid, transparent and powering each step of the way by people not PACs,” O’Rourke said on Monday.

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O’Rourke, who filed his candidacy for Senate alongside local and state Democratic leaders, detailed the last eight months since he announced his bid, which included holding 85 public events across Texas and visiting more than 155 counties.

He said he’ll spend most of December traveling around the state and will hit 30 counties ahead of the end-of-the-month holidays.

O’Rourke has raised nearly $2.8 million since he jumped into the race, according to reports filed with the Federal Election Commission. But Cruz, who’s also a prolific fundraiser, has nearly twice as much cash on hand, with nearly $5.7 million.

O’Rourke gained an endorsement from the national progressive group Progressive Change Campaign Committee back when he announced in March, and has since enjoyed other support.

But with a tough Senate map for the party, where they need to defend 10 seats in states that President Trump carried, Texas’s Senate seat likely won’t be a top fundraising priority for national Democrats.

Entertainers Balk at Performing for Trump Inauguration

After at least one member of the Radio City Rockettes publicly voiced her “embarrassment” over being forced to perform at the presidential inauguration of Donald Trump, the troupe’s owner on Friday appeared to back-pedal, saying participation is “voluntary.”

“I usually don’t use social media to make a political stand but I feel overwhelmed with emotion,” performer Phoebe Pearl wrote in a now-deleted Instagram post on Thursday after the group’s participation was announced.

“Finding out that it has been decided for us that Rockettes will be performing at the Presidential inauguration makes me feel embarrassed and disappointed,” she continued. “The women I work with are intelligent and are full of love and the decision of performing for a man that stands for everything we’re against is appalling. I am speaking for just myself but please know that after we found out this news, we have been performing with tears in our eyes and heavy hearts. #notmypresident.”

At the same time, BroadwayWorld obtained and republished a letter written by a “high-ranking member” of the dancers’ union, the American Guild of Variety Artists (AGVA) which stated that full-time performers were “obligated” to perform at Trump’s January 20 inauguration.

“We have received an email from a Rockette expressing concern about getting ‘involved in a dangerous political climate’ but I must remind you that you are all employees, and as a company, [James Dolan, executive chairman of the Madison Square Garden Company] obviously wants the Rockettes to be represented at our country’s Presidential inauguration, as they were in 2001 & 2005,” it read. “Any talk of boycotting this event is invalid, I’m afraid.”

“Everyone is entitled to her own political beliefs,” the email continued, “but there is no room for this in the workplace.”

Many took to Twitter to express support for the Pearl and the other Rockettes, and the hypocrisy of conservative outrage over the post.

The ensuing uproar prompted the Madison Square Garden Company to release a statement on Friday, distancing itself from the union’s forceful language. “For a Rockette to be considered for an event, they must voluntarily sign up and are never told they have to perform at a particular event, including the inaugural,” the group said. “It is always their choice. In fact, for the coming inauguration, we had more Rockettes request to participate than we have slots available.”

Whether or not that is the case, the furor over the inauguration performance comes amid news that numerous artists—including Elton John, Celine Dion, Garth Brooks, and Andrea Bocelli—have declined to perform.

Variety reported Friday that “Trump’s inauguration committee has been struggling to book talent for the event in the last few months, because so many artists publicly supported Hillary Clinton’s campaign”—a predicament that may have prompted this Thursday tweet from the president-elect:

As Rolling Stone‘s Steve Knopper reported Friday, even conservative acts are steering clear. “I do know some of the very conservative [artists] have no desire to do it. … [They] just don’t want to be involved in the circus—it’s a media circus, and not necessarily in a good way,” Ken Levitan, a “top” music manager who represents both liberal and conservative artists, told Knopper.

The Mormon Tabernacle Choir, which is performing at the inauguration alongside “America’s Got Talent” finalist Jackie Evancho, is also facing resistance.

More than 7,000 “members and friends of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints” (LDS) have signed onto a Change.org petition calling on the choir to cancel its participation.

“[A]n official LDS organization performing at a presidential inauguration gives the perception that the LDS church and its diverse 15+ million members worldwide support an incoming president’s agenda, values, and behaviors,” it states, which includes “sexist, racist, misogynistic, and xenophobic behavior that does not align with the principles and teachings” of the church.

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