| | Corey Lewandowski would be a very bad Senate candidate | | | When President Donald Trump rallies support for his 2020 reelection campaign in New Hampshire tonight, Corey Lewandowski will be sitting in the front row -- literally! -- cheering his old boss on. Lewandowski, who served as Trump's campaign manager until he was fired from that job in the summer of 2016, is now reportedly considering a run against Democratic Sen. Jeanne Shaheen in New Hampshire in 2020 and is hoping his closeness to the President will give him a leg up. Trump is doing his part -- even before arriving in the state on Thursday. "I will say this -- if he ran, he would be a great senator," Trump told a local radio station on the eve of the trip. "If he ran and won, he'd be a great senator. He would be great for New Hampshire. He'd be great for the country. He's got a tremendous drive. … If he ran, I think he'd be hard to beat in New Hampshire." That's not, uh, well, true. In fact, there's very little in Lewandowski's background to suggest that he would be "hard to beat." Lewandowski has run for office only once before -- for state house in Massachusetts when he was in college -- a race he lost. Prior to being plucked by Trump to serve as campaign manager in 2016, Lewandowski was widely considered a B- or C-level political operative even within his own state. (He was working for Americans for Prosperity, a Koch brothers-aligned group at the time.) If Lewandowski is known for anything during his political career, it's controversy. In 1999, while working for then-Rep. Bob Ney of Ohio, he reportedly brought a handgun into a House office building and was charged with a misdemeanor. Lewandowski said he had accidentally mixed up his bags. During Trump's 2016 bid, Lewandowski repeatedly found himself at the center of firestorms. He was accused of battery by former Breitbart reporter Michelle Fields, who said Lewandowski had yanked her arm at a Trump rally in Florida. (Local prosecutors decided against pursuing the charge against Lewandowski.) Soon after that, Lewandowski was apparently caught on camera at an Arizona rally grabbing the collar of a protester, which he denied doing. Those incidents are a big reason why lots of GOP operatives in New Hampshire are very skeptical about Lewandowski as their 2020 nominee. As Politico's Alex Isenstadt wrote this week: "Republican Gov. Chris Sununu has relayed concerns about Trump's controversial former campaign manager to party leadership. Tom Rath, a former New Hampshire attorney general and a prominent Republican in the state, says he's 'not a Corey fan.' Former GOP Sen. Judd Gregg took to the pages of New Hampshire's biggest newspaper to deride Lewandowski as a 'thug.' " Distrust from the party establishment could, of course, work in Lewandowski's favor -- making it easy for him to paint himself as a Trump-like outsider who status-quo politicians are afraid of. (If he did run, Lewandowski would join former state house Speaker Bill O'Brien and retired Brig. Gen. Donald Bolduc in the GOP race.) That closeness to Trump could be a major problem for Lewandowski if he winds up as the party's nominee. Trump lost the state -- albeit narrowly -- in 2016 to Hillary Clinton. The Point: If Lewandowski runs, he immediately becomes a problem for Senate Republicans seeking to hold or even grow their majority. There's an outside shot that Shaheen could be vulnerable in 2020, but it's hard to see Lewandowski -- and his baggage -- being the candidate who could beat her. -- Chris | | "The tall candidate almost always wins." -- Democratic presidential contender Bill de Blasio (measuring 6 feet 5 inches) on why he thinks he can beat President Donald Trump (who's 6 feet 3 inches tall). | | | SPEAKING OF LEWANDOWSKI ... | | Corey Lewandowski is in the news today for another reason, too. A House panel subpoenaed Lewandowski and former White House aide Rick Dearborn as it ramps up its investigation into whether President Trump should be impeached. Lewandowski and Dearborn have been asked to testify before the House Judiciary Committee on September 17. | | Sleater-Kinney plays their new song: "Broken." | | MORE ON CONGRESS AND GUN LAWS | | | Why passing gun control legislation is so hard | | In the wake of twin mass shootings in El Paso, Texas, and Dayon, Ohio, Congress is faced again with mounting pressure to pass gun control legislation. It's the same pressure lawmakers faced in 2013 following the Sandy Hook Elementary shooting. Is there any reason to think this time will be any different? Stay in the know with The Point on YouTube. | | LAUREN'S CAMPAIGN TRAIL LATEST | | John Hickenlooper: Has officially dropped out of the presidential race, bringing the current number of Democrats running for president to 23. He kept the door open for a potential Senate run. Cory Booker: Has a plan to tackle the rise of hate crimes and white supremacy, including establishing a White House Office on Hate Crimes and White Supremacist Violence to coordinate his administration's efforts. Marianne Williamson: Promoted anti-vaxxer theories on her radio show in a 2012 episode. Beto O'Rourke: Is back on the campaign trail and eschewing the pageantry of the road to the White House -- such as stops at the Iowa State Fair -- to refocus his bid for the Democratic nomination around the people and communities he says are most threatened by Trump's policies and rhetoric. | | 67 The percentage of Americans who support an assault weapons ban, according to a new Fox News poll. Of that number, there is a partisan split, with 86% of Democrats favoring a ban on automatic and semi-automatic weapons, while just 46% of Republicans favor such a ban. | | | | | |
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