Trump sets GOP midterm convention in Dallas, Sept. 9

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1–2 minutes

Summary

Trump said Republicans will hold a midterm convention in Dallas on Sept. 9 and 10 to focus attention on key House and Senate races.

Why this matters

The convention is an unusual national campaign event outside a presidential year and reflects how both parties are positioning for elections that will determine control of Congress. Its Texas location also intensifies attention on a closely watched Senate race and the state’s redistricting fight.

President Donald Trump said Tuesday that Republicans will hold a national convention in Dallas on Sept. 9 and 10 ahead of the November midterm elections.

National party conventions are typically held during presidential campaigns, but Trump has promoted a midterm gathering since last year as a way to focus attention on House and Senate races that will determine whether Republicans keep control of Congress.

Republicans hold narrow majorities in Congress, and the party in power often loses seats in midterm elections. Without Trump on the ballot, Republican leaders have expressed concern about voter turnout.

In a Truth Social post announcing the event, Trump wrote that Republicans would use it “to show the great things we have done since the Presidential Election of 2024.”

“We will also have lots of Great Entertainment — It will be a RALLY like none other!” Trump wrote.

The Republican National Committee voted at its winter meeting in January to amend procedures for presidential nominating conventions to allow such an event.

The Democratic National Committee considered holding a similar midterm convention but did not move forward. The story said party finances were strained by weaker fundraising and millions of dollars in debt. Democrats have said the Republican event will give them an opportunity to link GOP House and Senate candidates to Trump, whose approval rating is underwater.

Holding the convention in Texas also draws attention to the state’s Senate race between Democratic nominee James Talarico and Republican nominee Ken Paxton.

Paxton, the Texas attorney general, defeated Sen. John Cornyn in this year’s primary with Trump’s backing. Republican Senate leaders have said Paxton’s past scandals, including an extramarital affair, an impeachment, and a securities fraud case that did not lead to a conviction, could hurt his candidacy and force the party to spend more in a race they might otherwise expect to win.

The convention also comes after Trump’s redistricting push in Texas, which he has pursued to help Republicans gain seats in this fall’s elections.

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