Trump forces ‘staffing up’ to end GOP losing streak in Minnesota
Days after President
“I told him, ‘We appreciate you coming and we hope to see you here at least as many times before the election next year,’?” Carnahan said.
The president’s response: “I will be there.”
Minnesotans have picked the Democratic nominee for the
“We’re really excited to be very, very ahead of the curve as far as historically staffing up, especially in a state that the president came within 44,000 votes of flipping last time,” said
The early infusion of
Targeted states typically see a significant boost in advertising spending by the candidates, their parties, and an array of outside groups that have become significant players in national politics.
For Trump, winning the state appears to be a personal priority. The president has said publicly that he thinks “one more speech” here would have tipped the scales in 2016. He renewed his pledge to flip
“The Pledge of Allegiance to our great Country, in
Top officials from both parties say the
“There’s no doubt that the
Republicans’ hopes are pinned on the idea that they can replicate Trump’s strong 2016 performance, which helped the
Those midterm results, as well as Hillary Clinton’s failure to campaign in the state in person in 2016, could suggest that Trump’s near-win was a “fluke,” said
But Schultz, who wrote a book on presidential swing states, also has seen evidence that
“The state has been tightening for years and I think at the end of the day, you can perhaps make an argument that if Trump really targets the state, there’s a possibility he could flip it much in the way he flipped the rest of the Midwest in 2016,” Schultz said.
The key question, Schultz continued, is whether
“If those suburban women come out in the numbers they came out in last year, that probably still is enough to counteract any Trump surge,” he said.
“We’re going to fight like mad to keep
But
“It wasn’t just our core activists that showed up,” she said. “There were people that had showed up I have never seen before.”
Carnahan acknowledges that
“What we’re seeing is, who is going to be the farthest left, most extreme candidate,” Carnahan said. “That’s not going to do [
The
The hiring spree started with
But political parties and campaigns will only be one piece of the puzzle in 2020. Super PACs and other outside political advocacy groups are expected to pour tens of millions of dollars into the state, especially if polling shows a tight race between Trump and the eventual Democratic nominee. Independent groups spent
A recent report from a political ad-tracking firm named
Alexander, the
“We will absolutely spend one more dollar than is necessary to win,” she said.
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