![]() ![]() Such a state of affairs would have seemed unlikely in any other election year. The messaging comes as Hugin, a deep-pocketed, moderate Republican, claims to be within striking distance of Menendez, as most polls show the incumbent up by single digits and as national Democrats are putting big money into a New Jersey Senate race for the first time in years. The president’s repeated and sustained remarks on immigration have the potential to alienate many voters in New Jersey, where there are some 900,000 more registered Democrats than Republicans, and where the GOP hasn’t won a U.S. But it’s not about bringing this country together at the end of the day.” “It is about the politics of trying to drive his electoral base about one week before the election. “This is all about the politics of fear,” Menendez said. Menendez, the son of Cuban refugees, jumped on the immigration issue Tuesday, saying Trump was trying to stir up anger with his remarks and “militarization at the border.” The move is likely to face a legal challenge, with many saying the practice is protected by the U.S. On Tuesday, a week before the election, Axios published an interview in which Trump he said plans to sign an executive order that would end the practice of granting automatic U.S. In recent days, Trump has announced plans to send 5,200 active duty troops to the Mexican border and continued to make remarks about a caravan of migrants still some 1,000 miles from the U.S., saying the group includes “some very bad people” and warning they were planning “an invasion of our country.” The remarks by a leading Republican Senate candidate, said to be just a few paces behind a 12-year Democratic incumbent, show how the president’s near-daily overtures to immigration hardliners could complicate his party’s efforts in more moderate states and congressional districts. But my observation is I find some of the rhetoric inflammatory.” “I think there has been much of the president’s rhetoric that has been inflammatory,” Hugin said, though he didn’t know if that was Trump’s goal. Pressed on whether he applied those criticisms to Trump, Hugin said he did. “We’ve got to get people - elect people - who are going to work together to solve the people’s problems.” “Part of the problem is our country is too partisan,” Hugin said. ![]()
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