
Donald Trump has historically bad poll numbers for a president through the first 100 days in office, but the White House’s 2026 midterms strategy will run through Trump himself while trying to re-create the energy behind his 2024 campaign. Limited time: Save 25% on NBC News subscription Get exclusive reporting, live Q&As and ad-free reading. Republicans and top White House advisers generally believe the midterm maps are favorable to them in the Senate but more up in the air on the House side.
Main Idea: The Trump White House is planning to make President Donald Trump the center of its 2026 midterm strategy, hoping his energy and endorsements can offset weak poll numbers and help Republicans hold Congress.
Key Points:
Trump’s tariff fight and weak polling could keep markets shaky and raise pressure on consumers, workers, and small businesses if trade deals stall.
Trump’s focus on immigration and tight GOP races could energize turnout and shape 2026 policy choices for voters.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Central figure in the article; his poll numbers, endorsements, messaging, and midterm strategy drive the story.
Texas attorney general and primary challenger whose race is part of the article’s Senate strategy focus.
Georgia governor discussed as a possible candidate Trump may endorse against Senator Jon Ossoff.
Named Senate leader backing candidates in key races and part of the central endorsement strategy.
Central Republican Senate campaign organization involved in endorsements and race planning.
His re-election race is a specific example of early Senate primary maneuvering.
Major Senate target in the Republican 2026 strategy and a key Georgia race mentioned in the article.
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Sign in to commentNamed Republican senator described as potentially in danger in the midterms.
Named Republican senator described as potentially in danger in the midterms.
As NRSC chair, he is directly involved in early Senate endorsement decisions discussed in the article.
The other chamber at issue in the article’s midterm strategy discussion.
One of the two chambers whose 2026 control is a central subject of the article.