Last September, Donald Trump announced that he’d approved an emergency declaration for North Carolina in response to Hurricane Dorian, but the president thought it’d be a good idea to add an electoral twist to the news: Trump said he’d moved forward “at the request of” Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.).
In reality, North Carolina’s Democratic governor, Roy Cooper, had made the federal request, but the president wanted to boost Tillis, who’s a GOP incumbent and White House ally facing a tough re-election bid this year.
In October, after the storm hit the Tar Heel State, Trump did it again, connecting federal disaster aid directly to Thom Tillis — as if emergency assistance were somehow part of a White House political patronage system.
All of this came to mind this week when the president published a tweet saying the administration was dispatching 100 ventilators to Colorado — “at the request of” Sen. Cory Gardner (R-Colo.), who’s facing an uphill climb in his re-election campaign this fall. The political message was hardly subtle: Trump seemed to be signaling that Colorado is receiving medical equipment during a pandemic because of his political connection to a GOP senator.
Except, that’s not how the United States is supposed to function. It led the editorial board of the Denver Post to publish an unrestrained piece yesterday on the White House’s tactics.









