Newsweek - USA (2019-11-29)

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NEWSWEEK.COM 23


IMPEACHMENT


with her on an ambitious energy bill that the Alas-


ka senator has been pushing for three years. He also


told Trump to knock off the juvenile name-calling


of Romney, which other senators found distasteful.


“[McConnell] has stressed to the president that he


thinks he can keep the caucus together, but Trump


needs to help,” says a Senate source familiar with


McConnell’s thinking. “He can’t just demand loyal-


ty and expect to give nothing back. That’s not how


this is going to work.”


The passionate partisanship that has kept Repub-


licans aligned with Trump until now might work


against the president and McConnell. University of


Virginia political scientist Larry Sabato notes that


“the nationalization of politics—how people feel


about the president—is bleeding down the ballot


to an extreme degree.” In 2016, every state with a


Senate race voted for the same party for senator and


president—the first time that’s happened since 1912,


when the era of popular voting for the Senate be-


gan. And as Sabato says, “Impeachment may be the


ultimate nationalizing event” for Senate members.


To understand the implications, consider the


GOP senators up for reelection in purple swing


states: first-term Senators Cory Gardner of Colora-


do, Martha McSally of Arizona, and Joni Ernst of


Iowa. The first two are in races viewed as toss-ups; in


Colorado Trump is deeply underwater and in Arizo-


na only slightly less so. If the nationalization thesis


holds, it could be risky for Gardner and McSally to


vote to acquit an increasingly unpopular president.


Senator Ernst at this point is a slight favorite to


be re-elected in Iowa, but the race will be tricky.


Trump’s trade war with China has hurt the state’s


agricultural sector. Ernst also, associates say, has


complained about Trump’s boorishness: the hush


money payments to a porn star, the Billy Bush “lock-


er room talk” video. She publicly has been support-


ive of Trump but privately isn’t much of a fan.


If she defects, it could prompt some others—who


are currently saying all the right things to the White


House—to consider it, too. Tom Tillis of North Car-


olina is in a race considered a toss up. Trump won


North Carolina in 2016, but is no lock next year.


This is the scenario the Trump White House dreads,


and for good reason. The risk is not, at this point, that


enough GOP senators will defect to oust him—at least


not, again, based on what’s currently known about the


Ukraine affair. The risk is that even if he’s acquitted,


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Unpopular President.

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