McCarthy, Trump hold ‘very good and cordial’
meeting focused on 2022 midterms
A readout of the gathering in Florida quashed any
speculation that the former president would step aside from the Republican
Party.
By BENJAMIN
DIN
01/28/2021
05:10 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/01/28/kevin-mccarthy-donald-trump-midterms-meeting-463594
Former
President Donald Trump met House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy on Thursday for
what was later described as a “very good and cordial” meeting in which the top
agenda item was taking back the House of Representatives in 2022.
Although
many topics were discussed, according to a readout released by Trump’s Save
America leadership PAC, the chief focus was on the upcoming midterm elections,
when Republicans have a chance to take back the lower chamber after posting
surprising gains in the 2020 elections. Republicans picked up a net gain of at
least 10 seats in a year when Democrats hoped anti-Trump furor would help them
expand their majority.
“They
worked very well together in the last election and picked up at least 15 seats
when most predicted it would be the opposite,” said the readout, which was
released with a photo of the two men smiling in an ornately decorated room at
Mar-a-Lago in Florida. “They will do so again, and the work has already
started.”
The meeting
took place at Trump’s resort in Palm Beach, where he frequently visited as
president and has taken up his post-presidency residence.
In a
statement, McCarthy emphasized the “historic results for all Americans”
achieved by House Republicans and the Trump administration, saying that the
House GOP “defied the experts and the media by expanding our growing coalition
across the country.”
“Today,
President Trump committed to helping elect Republicans in the House and Senate
in 2022,” he said. “A Republican majority will listen to our fellow Americans
and solve the challenges facing our nation.”
The readout
also quashed any speculation that Trump would step aside from the Republican
Party, praising the former president for his popularity and championing the
weight of his endorsement.
“President
Trump’s popularity has never been stronger than it is today, and his
endorsement means more than perhaps any endorsement at any time,” it said.
McCarthy’s
high-profile meeting with Trump was confirmation that the California Republican
has chosen to align his political cards with the former president, who still
remains largely popular with those in his base. He endorsed Trump in 2016 and
has been a longtime Trump ally, earning him the nickname of “My Kevin.” His
embrace of the former president sharply diverges from that of McCarthy’s Senate
counterpart, Mitch McConnell, who has not spoken to Trump since Dec. 15.
However,
the McCarthy-Trump relationship seemed to sour in the weeks after the Capitol
riots on Jan. 6, leading McCarthy to flip-flop in his stance on Trump’s
involvement in inciting the violence. In the aftermath of the riots, McCarthy
said initially that Trump bore some responsibility for the attacks, before saying
that he didn’t provoke the rioters and ultimately shifting the blame to
“everybody across this country.”
In recent
days, Trump has used a top political aide to spread the word that he was a
member of the Republican Party and intended to remain so, shutting down talk
that he might branch out to form a third party. By doing so, he sends a message
to Senate Republicans on the eve of his upcoming impeachment trial. Already, he
has threatened his critics in the Senate GOP with primary challenges.
“The president
wanted me to know, as well as a handful of others, that the president is a
Republican, he is not starting a third party and that anything he would do
politically in the future would be as a Republican,” Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.)
told POLITICO. “The Republican Party is still overwhelmingly supportive of this
president.”
Although at
one point it seemed possible the Senate would convict the former president for
inciting the insurrection, an acquittal seems to be the foregone conclusion on
the Hill, after 45 Senate Republicans voted against the constitutionality of
the trial, which is set to start Feb. 9. A conviction would require the support
of all Democrats and 17 Republican senators.
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