The note: Trump, Obama brings styles of mourning and disparate messages
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The note: Trump, Obama brings styles of mourning and disparate messages
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The note: Trump, Obama brings styles of mourning and disparate messages
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"Crisis is", president Donald Trump He declared on Thursday, framing the balance of the race around the issue that encouraged his political rise from the beginning.
Crisis has always been with Trump. And the crisis will be in the frantic stretch until the partial examinations: the president will misinterpret the facts and the history around immigration, and misleading about the nature of the threats posed by a group of applicants refugees.
It is a play to fear while the campaign ends.
Scott Olson / Getty Images
Former President Barack Obama campaigns for Democratic candidates in Wisconsin during a rally at North Division High School on October 26, 2018, in Milwaukee.
And it creates quite a split screen with the Democrats. Former President Barack Obama campaigns Friday in Florida and Georgia; the latter is the state where Oprah Winfrey was the star on Thursday, with her request that voters support an "agent of change."
The other half of Obama's war cry, hope, is what the Democrats seek to channel in these last days. The dynamic seems established, but nobody is very sure of what will happen in part because the two parties have made such different bets in the country.
Trump is closing the campaign he is orchestrating. It worked before, but the scenario is not yours alone from here.
On Thursday, the president seemed to be in an alternative universe, one in which his administration did not separate families on the border and where his party has not been in power for the past two years.
Hearing the president blame the Democrats for everything that is not settled in the country felt a little desperate, since the Republican Party, in fact, has maintained control in Washington.
Saul Loedb / AFP / Getty Images
President Donald Trump and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell address a Republican political luncheon in the Senate at the United States Capitol in Washington on May 15, 2018.
After all, it was the Republicans in Congress who could not get enough votes from their own members to pass immigration reform, and then it was the president who decided he would not support a compromise bill. And it was also the Republicans who tried to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, and they failed.
Open registration for those health insurance Markets created under the so-called Obamacare law started again on Thursday for 2019. During last year's enrollment period, nearly 12 million Americans purchased insurance in the exchanges, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
Those holders of failed bills and last year's legislative drama might seem part of a distant past, but it is telling that the president is campaigning on what was not done in Washington, rather than what was done.
In any choice cycle, there are guaranteed cases in which Democrats and Republicans will complain about the same thing: third-party candidates who ruin their chances of victory.
But there will be no such strong control over two critical races that could decide the balance of power in the United States Senate.
Photo of Matt York / AP
Rep. Kyrsten Sinema, an Arizona Democrat, reviews the rules in a study before a televised debate with Rep. Martha McSally, Republican for Arizona, on October 15, 2018, in Phoenix. Both candidates seek to occupy the seat of Senator Jake Flake.
Two candidates from the third party, Libertarian Rick Breckenridge in Montana and Green Party candidate Angela Green in Arizona, abandoned and backed the Republican and Democratic candidates competing for seats in the Senate: Matt Rosendale and Kyrsten Sinema, respectively.
The development is good news for the two candidates, who are competing in races within the margin of error according to recent polls, and only four days before election day.
But one place where a third-party candidate could still have an impact is Indiana, where a recent NBC News / Marist poll shows that libertarian candidate Lucy Benton has a 7 percent run in a race in which Democratic Sen. Joe Donnelly and Republican Mike Braun split by only 3 points among likely voters.
The playlist
ABC News Podcast "Start here". The Friday morning episode features Adam Kelsey of ABC News, who reports from New Jersey on how the youth vote could encourage Democrats in Tuesday's midterm elections. And, FiveThirtyEight's editor-in-chief, Micah Cohen, joins us to provide you with up-to-date information about his model, which still favors the Democrats taking the House of Representatives and the Republicans to retain control of the Senate. http://apple.co/2HPocUL
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW TODAY
President Donald Trump heads to Huntington, West Virginia, for another "Make America Great Again Again" meeting at 4 p.m. with the Republican candidate to the Senate of the United States Patrick Morrisey. This will be Trump's third demonstration in West Virginia in this mid-term cycle, as Morrisey seeks to oust incumbent Democratic Senator Joe Manchin. He then heads to Indianapolis, Indiana, for a second MAGA rally at 7:15 p.m.
Former President Barack Obama continues his aggressive campaign program in the final days of the partial exams, spearheading a rally in Miami for Florida's gubernatorial candidate Andrew Gillum and Senator Bill Nelson. Both Gillum and Nelson have neck and neck with their respective Republican opponents and both Sun State battles are expected to be among the closest races on Tuesday.
Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren begins her campaign in Wisconsin and joins Senator Tammy Baldwin for stops in Milwaukee and Madison. Warren, a possible candidate for president in 2020, is seeking to shore up the support of Baldwin, who has maintained a steady lead over his Republican opponent, state Sen. Leah Vukmir, in the final weeks of the campaign. The governor's career in the badger state between the titular governor of the Republican Party, Scott Walker, and the Democrat Tony Evers, remains a challenge.
This week in "This week": just a few days until Election Day, the Powerhouse Roundtable debates the week in politics, with ABC White correspondent in the White House Jonathan Karl, the ABC News correspondent in the House Blanca Cecilia Vega, ABC News political analyst Matthew Dowd, former Chris Christie, governor of New Jersey and ABC News contributor, and Democratic strategist and former Democratic National Committee chairman, Donna Brazile.
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The Note is a daily feature of ABC News that highlights the political analysis of the upcoming day. Please come back tomorrow to see the latest news.
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