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Trump tests midterm coattails with visit to Lawler's 'Harris district'

John T. Bennett, CQ-Roll Call on

Published in Political News

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump put his midterm coattails to the test Friday by trekking into a New York House district won by Kamala Harris in the last presidential election.

“It’s this radical turnaround, and we better do it fast, because we’re not going to have a New York left, and we got to have New York left,” Trump said to cheers. “Guys like Mike Lawler, guys like Bruce Blakeman, you put them in, they’ll turn it around.

“With the help of your great congressman … we got your taxes cut,” he added. “Your take-home pay has soared, and all of the other things that we did. … The Democrats, they want to raise your taxes.”

That was a reference to New York GOP Rep. Mike Lawler, who was Trump’s host for an event in Suffern, a city tucked into the southern tip of the Empire State. Lawler won the 17th District by 6.3 percentage points in 2024, while the former Democratic vice president bested Trump there by 1 percentage point. It was one of only three House districts won by a GOP candidate and Harris. Blakeman, a Republican, is the county executive in Nassau County, and is running to unseat Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul.

Trump appeared with Lawler at a community college in Rockland Country, where he defeated Harris in 2024, 55.7% to 43.9%. The White House touted the stop as an official presidential visit to discuss the Trump 2.0-congressional Republican economic record and its efforts to lower prices in a county with a median household income of $109,959, according to Census Bureau data.

For Lawler, Trump’s appearance in the so-called “Harris district” is something of a political gamble. A number of recent polls show the GOP president with record-low approval numbers, including on his handling of a sluggish economy, high prices, the stalemate with Iran and his controversial White House ballroom project.

Inside Elections ranks Lawler’s reelection race as a toss-up, as does the Cook Political Report. Notably, Trump was initially scheduled to fly from Suffern to his Bedminster, N.J., golf club, but the White House announced he would return to Washington. In a cryptic Truth Social post, Trump said he would skip his eldest son’s weekend wedding because “I feel it is important for me to remain in Washington, D.C., at the White House during this important period of time.”

Here are three takeaways from the campaign stop:

—SALT, anyone?

Lawler bringing the unpopular Trump to his district was a sign his campaign believes the path to victory in November would be paved with a large turnout among the area’s registered Republicans — and conservative voters from the president’s “Make America Great Again” base.

Independent voters have steadily been turning on Trump since he returned to the White House in January 2025. Seventy percent of the key voting bloc said they disapproved of the president’s handling of the economy in a national poll conducted on May 20 by Quinnipiac University, with 27% of independents approving.

Trump made an economic pitch on Friday, telling the New Yorkers that GOP policies mean “you’re able to write off nearly $22,000 on average, putting thousands of dollars back in your pockets, and these are all Republican tax cuts.”

“The Democrats voted against every one of these tax cuts — every one. They voted, as an example, in favor of open borders,” he said. “They voted against the sanity of when we talk about men playing in women’s sports.”

Lawler spoke briefly around the one-hour mark, playing to Trump ego’s by saying, “You moved Rockland County further to the right than any county in New York in 2024.” He then credited Trump with delivering New York voters the state and local tax deduction, also known as SALT.

“I want to thank you for working with me to deliver a big win by lifting the cap on SALT,” Lawler said as Trump looked on. “Over 90 percent of my constituents were able to fully deduct their state and local taxes, and I thank you for fulfilling that commitment.”

 

One Democratic candidate competing to face Lawler in the general election, Cait Conley, wrote on X that “Mike Lawler and Donald Trump’s agenda has done nothing but raise costs for families in the Hudson Valley. Illegal tariffs, healthcare cuts, and a foreign war driving up gas prices. The Hudson Valley knows this duo isn’t delivering. In November, we hold them accountable.”

—Save America sales pitch

Trump touted the stalled “Save America Act,” a package of Republican-crafted voting system changes. Senate GOP leaders pulled the legislation late last month out of need for floor time for higher election-year priorities.

Trump was in full sales mode on Friday.

“The illegal aliens are all over the place. The people are getting shot left and right. The elections are rigged. They don’t have voter ID. They don’t have proof of citizenship. Think of it. We want to get the Save America Act passed now,” he said.

The crowd of loyalists erupted in a chant of “U-S-A! U-S-A!”

“So it’s voter ID, it’s proof — a little thing called proof of citizenship — and … mail-in voting is a disaster,” the president said of the benched bill, referring to existing elections laws and process as a “rigged system.”

Trump has aggressively urged Senate Republicans to nix the legislative filibuster to pass the measure, but leaders have refused.

—‘Let’s go Knicks!’

Team Trump sent other GOP luminaries to the 17th District, underscoring its importance.

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick spoke before Trump, and hailed Lawler for helping the administration pass Republicans’ tax and spending bill last year.

In a lighter moment, Lutnick led the crowd in a “Let’s go Knicks!” chant.

The New York Knicks lead their best-of-seven games NBA Eastern Conference Finals series against the Cleveland Cavaliers 2-0.

About an hour later, Trump was interrupted by a shouting protester and told security: “Don’t hurt him. I do that for legal reasons. … And now, I can say I’m innocent.”


©2026 CQ-Roll Call, Inc., All Rights Reserved. Visit cqrollcall.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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