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Does a Trump Endorsement Hurt GOP Candidates?
Republican candidates keep losing when Trump comes to town
In 2017, Republicans laughed at Democrats’ embrace of the moral victory of coming close. In 2018, he held 44 "Make America Great Again" rallies and tweeted endorsements of 83 candidates. In all, 91 Republican candidates got some kind of nod from Trump according to NPR. But Trump's actual success record fell well short of a "complete victory." Overall, approximately 58 percent of the candidates he endorsed have won so far. Overall, of the Trump-endorsed 17 candidates for governor, ten won and seven lost. In 2019, in losing red states even after Trump got involved, Republicans might not even have that.
Louisiana Governor
John Bel Edwards (D): 51.3% ✔
Eddie Rispone (R): 48.7%
Kentucky Governor
Andy Beshear (D): 49.2% ✔
Matt Bevin (R): 48.8%
Nevada Senate
Jacky Rosen (D): 50.4% ✔
Dean Heller (R): 45.4%
Nevada Governor
Steve Sisolak (D): 49.4% ✔
Adam Laxalt (R): 45.3%
Alabama Senate
Doug Jones (D): 49.9% ✔
Roy Moore (R): 48.4%
Wisconsin Governor
Tony Evers (D): 49.6% ✔
Scott Walker (R): 48.5%
Wisconsin Senate
Tammy Baldwin (D): 55.4% ✔
Leah Vukmir (R): 44.6%
Using tweets as a stand-in for endorsements, in primaries, Trump's chosen candidates fared remarkably well, with a record of 27-1. But in the general election, where Republican base voters weren't the only ones deciding the outcome, Trump's scorecard is mixed, with 53 wins, 36 losses and two races not yet decided so far. That's counting candidates he tweeted endorsements for or who spoke onstage at MAGA rallies with him. There were also two special House elections in 2018, which one of his candidates won and one lost. Trump crowed about gubernatorial wins in important 2020 swing states including Ohio and Florida, but he failed to acknowledge losses for Republicans in Colorado, Nevada, Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania.
Brut.