In the wake of some Republican primaries in June that went the way the White House wanted, Donald Trump interpreted the results as proof that Democrats would have a difficult year at the ballot box. “So much for the big Blue Wave,” the president wrote on June 6, “it may be a big Red Wave.”
That didn’t make a lot of sense — Republican victories in Republican primaries do not diminish Democratic prospects — but two months later, Trump was at it again. “[T]here will not be a Blue Wave,” the president wrote on Aug. 5, “but there might be a Red Wave!”
In all, looking exclusively at Trump’s tweets, he’s talked up the idea of a “red wave” — a reference to major Republican gains in the 2018 midterms — seven times since summer began.
And while it’s easy to laugh at such analysis, Republicans are confronting an awkward problem: many of the party’s voters actually believe the president’s assurances and are feeling quite confident about this year’s midterms. The New York Times reported over the weekend:
America First Action, a political committee aligned with Mr. Trump, conducted a series of focus groups over the summer and concluded the party had a severe voter-turnout problem, brought on in part by contentment about the economy and a refusal by Republicans to believe that Democrats could actually win the midterm elections.









