WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump insisted Tuesday that Republicans have ''so many good nuggets'' to campaign on this year as they try to hold onto their razor-thin margin in the House.
But the president's nearly 90-minute speech before House Republicans had little in the way of a fresh policy agenda or a cohesive new message to guide the year. Instead, he meandered from defending his actions during the Capitol riot five years ago to joking about being liberal-minded to win the votes of transgender people to making head-scratching references to Franklin Delano Roosevelt's use of a wheelchair.
As he promised political ''ammunition'' to help Republicans, Trump emphasized the success of his 2024 presidential campaign, reminding the audience that he carried every swing state as he pondered why voters tend to turn against the party in power during midterm elections.
''They say that when you win the presidency, you lose the midterms,'' Trump said in remarks at the Kennedy Center, the performing arts venue that his allies recently renamed for him. ''I wish you could explain to me what the hell is going on with the mind of the public.''
He warned that if Democrats regain control of Congress, ''they'll find a way to impeach me.''
Trump's appearance at the GOP's policy forum was meant to ensure House Republicans and the White House were aligned on their agenda ahead of the November midterms that will determine control of Congress and the course of Trump's final two years in office. Rising health care costs, Trump's expansive foreign policy pursuits and other issues are dramatically splitting the GOP, as some Republicans become more comfortable crossing party lines to bypass House Speaker Mike Johnson and join proposals from Democrats.
It all points to a difficult year ahead for the president and his party, especially as the House's slim majority narrowed Tuesday with the sudden death of California Rep. Doug LaMalfa, which was announced to lawmakers as they traveled to the performing arts center, and the resignation of former Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, which took effect at midnight.
But Trump spent more time rehashing past grievances during the appearance than articulating a broad election-year strategy or offering specifics on how he's addressing affordability concerns of voters.