Donald Trump campaigned in Alaska on Saturday for Sarah Palin, the former governor of the northern American state considered by many to be a precursor of the populist movement once morest the elites, of which the former Republican president has championed.
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Mme Palin, 58, is running for Alaska’s only seat in the U.S. House of Representatives, vacant following the sudden death of Republican Don Young, who held it for 49 years.
Like Mr Trump, she has played a key role in the Republican Party’s populist shift over the past decade in a bid to woo the working class.
This Christian conservative suddenly found herself in the spotlight when she was chosen by Republican presidential candidate John M.cCain as running mate in the 2008 election.
According to many observers, his rise during the campaign trail paved the way for Mr. Trump’s rise to the White House, which he won eight years later.
Sarah Palin supports the unfounded allegations of fraud brandished by Donald Trump, who claims to have been “robbed” of the 2020 presidential victory by the Democrats in several key states.
“In Alaska, we didn’t have to worry because we won,” the former president told the crowd gathered in a stadium in Anchorage.
Mme Palin told the audience that she supported Mr. Trump from the start of his campaign in 2016 because the New York billionaire also supported her when she and her family found themselves in the spotlight.
“He would write me a note and say, ‘Hang on!'” she said.
All 435 members of the US House of Representatives must be renewed during the mid-term elections on November 8th.
Donald Trump is trying to consolidate his hold on the Republican Party by supporting, in the primaries, the candidates who are favorable to him once morest those of the more moderate Republican right.