With the monthslong fight serving as a testing ground for his nationalist appeals and the strength of the coalition that powered him to the White House two years ago, Trump closed out a campaign season that has been defined by his racially charged rhetoric, hard-line immigration moves and scattershot policy proposals. Acknowledging the stakes in the closing days of campaigning, Trump stressed that everything is on the line.
“It’s all fragile. Everything I told you about, it can be undone and changed by the Democrats if they get in,” Trump told supporters Monday during a telephone “town hall” organized by his re-election campaign. “You see how they’ve behaved. You see what’s happening with them. They’ve really become radicalized.”
Trump’s usually active Twitter feed was quiet Tuesday as voting booths opened across the country. He returned to the White House in the wee hours of the morning after headlining final campaign rallies in Ohio, Indiana and Missouri, and planned to spend Election Day at the White House but out of public view.
He and first lady Melania Trump voted in New York via absentee ballot several weeks ago, the White House said.
Press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said Trump would spend the day making telephone calls, monitoring congressional and gubernatorial races and meeting with his political team. In the evening, family and friends were joining Trump and first lady in the White House residence to watch the election returns.
In an election-eve interview, Trump struck a gentler tone by telling Sinclair Broadcasting he regretted some of his caustic campaign rhetoric.
“I would like to have a much softer tone. I feel to a certain extent I have no choice, but maybe I do,” Trump said.
Little of that was on display Monday as Trump spent his final hours on the trail in Ohio, Indiana and Missouri, where his rhetoric on illegal immigration turned harsh and he lobbed attacks at Democrats.
“The contrast in this election could not be more clear. Democrats produce mobs,” Trump said at his final rally in Cape Girardeau, Missouri. “That’s what’s happened. Republicans produce jobs.”
He warned in a Monday tweet that law enforcement was “strongly notified to watch closely for any ILLEGAL VOTING which may take place in Tuesday’s Election (or Early Voting).” Trump has falsely claimed that millions of illegal votes were cast in 2016, which he says deprived him of a victory in the popular vote, and has stoked concerns, without providing evidence, of rampant fraudulent voting. Studies have found voter fraud to be a rare occurrence in the U.S.
“I do eventually want to unite,” Trump said in Fort Wayne, Indiana, “but I’m driving them crazy.”
Trump has sought to distance himself from potential blame if Republicans lose the House, saying “My primary focus has been on the Senate.”
Whatever the outcome, Trump made clear he knew his political future was on the line.
“In a sense, I am on the ticket,” he told a raucous crowd in Cleveland.
He warned supporters on the telephone town hall to vote because “the press is very much considering it a referendum on me and us as a movement.”
Republicans are increasingly confident they will retain control of the Senate, but they face Democratic headwinds in the House. In an interview with The Associated Press last month, Trump said he would not accept blame for a GOP defeat at the polls.
Trump has maintained a busy campaign schedule in the final stretch of the race, with 11 rallies over six days. He also had special guests join him.
Country singer Lee Greenwood performed Trump favorite “God Bless the USA” on Sunday in Chattanooga, Tennessee, and appeared with the president Monday night in Missouri.
In Indiana and in Missouri, Trump invited Sanders and counselor Kellyanne Conway on stage to speak along with his daughter Ivanka Trump.
Fox News personality Sean Hannity and conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh served as “special guests” at the final rally in Missouri, according to Trump’s campaign, though Hannity insisted on Twitter he would only be “covering (the) final rally for my show.” Trump, however, did call Hannity to the stage.
At his rallies and on Twitter, Trump’s closing argument has largely focused on fear — warning, without evidence, that a Democratic takeover would deliver the country into socialism, spurring an influx of illegal immigration and a wave of crime.
Attacks on favorite Trump foes House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters were staples of Trump’s closing message to voters as he argued that Democrats would plunge the country into Venezuela-like chaos.
Faced with low Republican enthusiasm, Trump is convinced that immigration will again be an animating issue for his base. He seized on the caravans of Central American migrants to reinforce an immigration message that recalls the racially charged immigration talk of his 2016 campaign.
“That’s an invasion. I don’t care what they say,” Trump said Monday of the thousands of migrants walking toward the U.S.-Mexico border.
Trump has also used the confirmation battle for Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh to stir up his most loyal supporters. Aides believe it to be one of the most effective arguments for bringing GOP voters to the polls.
“We energized the Republican Party with that,” Trump said in Missouri. “The Democrats overplayed their hand.”
In the final sprint to Election Day, Trump has pushed forward with rallies amid news events that would have halted previous leaders — holding a massive event in Illinois the same day a gunman massacred 11 people in a Pittsburgh synagogue.
Often the candidates Trump has traveled to support seem like supporting actors in the theater of his rallies, though in the final days of the campaign Trump has been more generous in his praise of Republicans he wishes to see elected.
In cramped aircraft hangars and pack arenas across battleground states, Trump has boasted about the energetic displays of support from his most loyal backers, drawing parallels to his own White House bid. “There’s electricity in the air like I haven’t seen since ’16,” he said Monday.
“This is a very important election,” Trump added, emphasizing the stakes. “I wouldn’t say it’s as important as ’16, but it’s right up there.”
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Lucey and Miller reported from Washington. Associated Press writer Jill Colvin in Washington contributed to this report.