Donald Trump speaks to reporters during a news conference at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Florida, on August 8.
Alex Brandon/AP
Donald Trump didn’t go to Montana for a Friday night rally because he’s desperate for votes in the ruby-red state. He’s won it for two straight presidential elections, each time by more than 15 points.
The coming election figures to offer more of the same. The question, though, is whether Republican Senate nominee Tim Sheehy can come close to matching Trump and unseat the crafty Democratic incumbent Jon Tester. If Sheehy succeeds, the GOP’s road to a Senate majority becomes a whole lot clearer.
But there’s more to this trip than the usual election season maneuvering.
For Trump, ousting Tester has become something of an obsession. In 2018, he traveled to the state four times trying to boost support for Republican nominee Matt Rosendale – now a congressman – in his race against Tester. It didn’t work. Rosendale lost by about 3 points.
The former president’s beef with Tester dates back to 2018, when the Montana Democrat was ranking member of the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee and vehemently opposed Trump’s nominee to run the Department of Veterans Affairs, White House physician Ronny Jackson.
Jackson became a Trump favorite early on, when the physician stood up in front of the White House press corps in 2018 and gushed over Trump’s “incredible genes” and, as he told it, “very sharp, very articulate” manner of speaking.
A couple of months later, Trump tapped Jackson to lead the VA Department. It seemed an odd choice, given Jackson’s lack of experience for such a high-level job. But he might have been confirmed if not for the release of an explosive report by Democrats, led by Tester, alleging that Jackson?was “abusive” to his colleagues and fast and loose with drug prescriptions. He was also accused of being intoxicated on the job and wrecking a government vehicle while drunk.
Jackson denied the charges and, after being elected to Congress years later, called the report a “political hit job.”
Trump, having held Jackson in such high regard, was infuriated at Democrats for undermining his pick. Jackson eventually withdrew himself from consideration for the post. In July 2018, Trump visited Montana, where he ripped into Tester.
“Jon Tester showed his true colors with his shameful, dishonest attacks on a great man,” Trump said of Jackson at a rally in Great Falls. “That’s probably why I’m here.”
Trump would return a few more times. Now, years later, he is back and once again seeking revenge.