U.S. President Donald Trump is seeking to bounce back from one of the worst weeks of his presidency by taking the stage before a friendly audience and focusing on a familiar topic: immigration.
But his visit to Arizona on Tuesday also will highlight the hurdles in front of the president that leave some of the goals he set when running for office still just out of reach.
Among them are the deep divisions in the country. Trump’s hard-line stance on immigration energizes both his core supporters and his most ardent critics. Officials in Phoenix are bracing for large-scale demonstrations as Trump opponents and supporters converge on the city’s downtown for the president’s appearance Tuesday night.
Trump’s opponents are further motivated by anger over the president’s response to the August 12 white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia. After a man plowed his car into a crowd of anti-racism protesters, killing a woman, Trump was widely criticized for his remarks that blamed both sides for violence.
Phoenix Mayor Greg Stanton, a Democrat who had urged Trump to cancel his rally after the Charlottesville incident, made an appeal Monday for civil and peaceful demonstrations.
Party Feud
Arizona also illustrates Trump’s fraught relationship with his own party. While Trump won Arizona in November, he’s been openly feuding with the state’s two Republican senators, John McCain and Jeff Flake, both of whom are frequent Trump critics.
Trump last week called Flake, who’s up for re-election in 2018, “a non-factor in the Senate” and “toxic” in a tweet that also welcomed a primary challenge to him from former State Senator Kelli Ward. That prompted several senior Republican senators, including Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, to come out with statements of support for Flake.
Neither Flake nor McCain is planning to attend Trump’s rally.
Arizona Governor Doug Ducey, a Republican also facing re-election in 2018, is attempting a delicate dance around Trump’s visit. Ducey won’t be accompanying Trump at his Phoenix rally.
Safety First
“Governor Ducey’s focus has been working with law enforcement toward a safe event in downtown Phoenix for all those involved and in the area. That will continue to be his priority during the event and afterwards,” Ducey spokesman Daniel Scarpinato told The Arizona Republic.
Speculation surrounding the question of whether Trump would take the opportunity, while in the state, to issue a pardon to former Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio was put to rest when White House press Secretary Sarah Sanders told reporters Tuesday there would be “no discussion of that today.”