LEWIS CENTER, Ohio: Embracing his breakneck return to campaign politics, President Donald Trump on Saturday argued that Republicans needed to control Congress by casting the midterms as a referendum on himself.
In a raucous rally in a sweltering gymnasium north of Columbus, Trump pitched for state Sen. Troy Balderson — the GOP candidate up in a special election this week — and defiantly questioned the idea that, historically, the party that controls the White House suffers in the midterms, declaring “but I say why?”
“Why would there be a blue wave? I think it could be a red wave,” Trump said of his party’s prospects in November. “They want to take away what we’ve given. And we’re doing a lot of things people don’t even know about.”
Though boisterous and bellicose, Trump steered clear of the trouble he stirred up the night before when he blasted one of Ohio’s favorite sons, LeBron James.
In a late-night tweet, Trump derided the intelligence of one of the nation’s most prominent African-American men.
But while the president didn’t mention James, he did invoke similar rhetoric while training fire on one of his new favorite targets, Democrat Rep. Maxine Waters of California. He tore into Waters, who is also black, and derided her as “an extremely low IQ person.”
Flanked by signs that read “Promises Made” and “Promises Kept,” Trump dished up plenty of red meat to the sweaty crowd.
He blasted the media as “fake news” and said journalists “were terrible people.” He went on a screed against illegal immigration and exaggerated the threat of violent gangs like MS-13. And he basked in cheers as the crowd chanted the campaign staple rallying cry, “Build the wall, build the wall.”
And Trump touted his supporters as “forgotten no more,” saying that they, and he, were the nation’s true “elite.”
“The elite. They’re more elite than me? I am better everything than they have, including this,” Trump said, pointing at his own head. “And I became president and they didn’t. Meaning you became president. And it’s driving them crazy.”
Trump relished playing the role of kingmaker, bragging how the GOP candidates he’s opposed, like Rep. Mark Sanford of South Carolina, have lost.
He also gave an onstage hug to Rep. Jim Jordan, who is under siege after allegations that, as an assistant wrestling coach at Ohio State University, he knew of alleged sexual abuse by a team doctor but did not report it. Jordan, who has denied the charge, has announced his plan to run for speaker of the House.
“Jim Jordan, how great is he?” Trump said. “What a great defender he’s been, what courage. He’s a brave, tough cookie.”
Trump gave a full-throated endorsement to Balderson, who is facing Democrat Danny O’Connor, the Franklin County recorder, in Tuesday’s special election to fill a vacant U.S. House seat. He touted Balderson’s record on crime and immigration and claimed that O’Connor, if he won, would be a “puppet” of Nancy Pelosi, who stands to reclaim the title of speaker of the House if Democrats seize control of the body this fall.
He again attacked the news media and said they incorrectly reported that he was backing Rep. Steve Stivers in the special election — even though Trump himself in recent days had inadvertently tweeted his support for Stivers, who is in a different race, before correcting himself.
ohio.com