Anonymous ID: 6af293 May 22, 2019, 12:11 p.m. No.6560087   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>0093 >>0109

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New York Times

 

Trump Supported Changing New York G.O.P. Leader

By Maggie Haberman and Jesse McKinley

 

For months, President Trump’s political advisers have been working to remake state Republican parties to cement their control ahead of the 2020 election.

 

But Mr. Trump had a vested interest in helping dictate the leadership and direction of one state party in particular.

 

In New York, where Mr. Trump was born, raised and ruminated for years about a political campaign of his own, the State Republican Party had a leadership change on Monday, moving from the genteel leadership of Edward F. Cox, the son-in-law of President Richard M. Nixon, to the grass-roots style of Nick Langworthy, of Erie County.

 

The president and his campaign aides never spoke publicly about Mr. Langworthy’s bid to unseat Mr. Cox. But for months, top aides to Mr. Trump were discussing the race with Mr. Langworthy.

 

The former White House political director, Bill Stepien, was in contact with Mr. Langworthy, the chairman of the Erie County Republican Party, since December, as Mr. Langworthy worked to amass enough support to overtake Mr. Cox, according to New York officials briefed on the discussions.

 

Inside the West Wing, Mr. Trump was apprised of what was happening in his home state. Initially, Mr. Trump only had minimal interest, but he became more engaged as it became clear that Mr. Langworthy was moving ahead, according to people close to the president.

 

In recent weeks, one of Mr. Trump’s White House aides, Dan Scavino, the digital director who is from Dutchess County, spoke with a local Republican official there, conveying that the president “likes” Mr. Cox, but couldn’t understand why the party lost control of the State Senate last year, according to one person familiar with the discussion.

 

Mr. Cox was present at a fund-raiser Mr. Trump held last Thursday at the home of the Cantor Fitzgerald executive Howard Lutnick, and signaled to national party officials at the event that he would step aside, the person said.

 

Mr. Cox had led the party since 2009, taking over just before a wave of Tea Party energy swept a half-dozen Republicans into Democratic-held congressional seats. But he was never able to convert that momentum into something more durable.

 

In 2014, Mr. Cox earned Mr. Trump’s enmity, when some New York Republicans tried to draft Mr. Trump into the governor’s race, and Mr. Cox backed a different candidate.

 

Roughly two years later, when Mr. Trump was forming a team for the New York presidential primary, it largely comprised residents of upstate and Western New York, some of whom had worked on the campaign of the insurgent 2010 candidate for governor, Carl Paladino, one of the president’s most vocal supporters in his home state.

 

“While the New York State G.O.P. declined under Ed Cox, the Erie County Republican Party thrived,” said Michael Caputo, who worked for Mr. Paladino during the 2010 race, and helped lead Mr. Trump’s efforts in the state in 2016.

 

“Every time I attend Nick’s monthly grass-roots meeting, I see more and more young people,” he added. “He’s got them volunteering, petitioning, voting by the dozens.”

 

Mr. Cox has now gone from getting married in the Rose Garden of the White House decades ago to being given a slot on the Trump campaign finance team as a landing pad.

Anonymous ID: 6af293 May 22, 2019, 12:11 p.m. No.6560093   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>0109

>>6560087

 

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New York Times

 

Trump Supported Changing New York G.O.P. Leader

 

By Maggie Haberman and Jesse McKinley

 

In a news conference at Republican Party headquarters in Albany on Tuesday, Mr. Cox stressed that New York, while not a swing state, remained a critical cog in the fund-raising machine.

 

“New York State can play a role in re-electing President Trump,” Mr. Cox said, as he stood alongside Mr. Langworthy. “We certainly played a role in 2016, and we can play it in 2020.”

 

Mr. Cox also noted that he would be joining the finance committee with Trump Victory, a joint fund-raising committee backing his re-election, and also sought to portray the latest events as a sign of his loyalty and faith in the president. “This is all about President Trump and getting him re-elected,” Mr. Cox said.

 

Yet for Mr. Cox, the circumstances of his departure from the state Republican Party were a vivid reminder that Mr. Trump’s memories about who supported him — and who did not — do not fade, and can only be overwritten by his needs in the moment.

 

Mr. Cox said he was predicting a Trump victory next year, in what he called “a realignment election,” something he said that his father-in-law, Mr. Nixon, had also tried to accomplish, with a coalition of “Southern Democrats along with the Northern ethnics” who often voted for Democratic candidates.

 

“I think this president can bring in those Democratic voters and realign the party system, into where the Republican Party will be the majority party in the United States,” Mr. Cox said. “I look forward to being part of that campaign.”

 

For his part, Mr. Langworthy, an early and ardent supporter of Mr. Trump, said he hoped to flip back several congressional seats that Republicans lost in 2018. “In every race we lost, we’re going to go right back at,” he said.

 

He also insisted that voters would not be as concerned with social issues like abortion, which he conceded Democrats had done a good job of spinning to their advantage with female voters. “This is going to be a pocketbook election,” Mr. Langworthy said. “And the Trump economy is on fire.”

 

“The president,” he said, “is going to be much more popular than people think.”