In April it was announced that Deputy Chief of Staff James Blaire would be leaving the White House to head President Donald Trump’s midterm political operation. At the time, White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles declared him “a top lieutenant of the President’s,” saying Blaire had provided “invaluable” service for nearly a decade. Trump himself asserted Blaire as “one of the brightest political minds in the Country who has done tremendous work to prepare Republicans to DEFY LONGSTANDING HISTORY AND WIN the Midterms, just as he helped me do in 2024, BY A LANDSLIDE.”
On Wednesday, Politico ran an interview with Blaire in which he revealed the approach he’s going to use, with his core strategy being “attack, attack, attack.”
One form of that attack involves gerrymandering. When asked about the shifting midterm maps in the wake of the Supreme Court’s recent decision, which some say gutted the Voting Rights Act, Blaire noted, “You see Louisiana taking action. You see Tennessee taking action. You see Alabama taking action.” He explained that there is a “robust appetite” to seize on redistricting opportunities, saying, “Here's what I know: the overall efforts of our strategy will net a substantial swing of seats to Republicans.”
Whether that strategy can prevail in the face of voter outrage is up for debate. Asked about the president’s abysmal polling in regard to the war with Iran and its attendant economic consequences, which many argue will mean doom for the GOP in November, Blaire dodged, trying to pin the blame on his opponents.
“The Democrats will have to convince the electorate how they’re going to make their lives more affordable when they tried to raise taxes on 90 percent of Americans by $4 trillion last summer,” he argued, ignoring the skyrocketing cost of living driven by the war in Iran and Trump’s tariff regime, which experts say amounts to one of the largest tax hikes in history. “And that’s just the beginning of the contrasts we will make with them. Swing voters already think the Democratic Party's too far left, and we’re going to make sure voters know just how far left they are. They are woke, weak and way too liberal. And the whole country will be reminded of that.”
He also addressed concerns raised by Republican donors over the “unspent millions” that appear to have disappeared into Trump’s war chest, saying not only that worries about where the money has gone are baseless, but that Republicans are positioned to outspend Democrats via the president’s MAGA Inc. super PAC. What’s more, he claimed that while a unified GOP is focused on raising money, their Democratic opponents are “divided, they don’t have confidence in their leadership, their candidates are fighting themselves, they are wasting their money.”
While Politico notes that Blaire projects a striking sense of confidence in his assertions, the reality behind his claims is less certain. Republicans are in fact “deeply divided” over matters like the war with Iran, the abysmal economy and Trump’s mishandling of the Epstein files. Congressional Republicans have struggled to overcome in-party fights over a range of issues, and on Wednesday, three GOP senators voted against Trump’s actions in the Middle East. What's more, Republican candidates have been battling against one another in primaries across the country, as some GOP leaders have taken steps to distance themselves from the party’s MAGA wing.
But Blaire never suggested that his political strategy should be factual, leaning instead into relentless offensiveness.
“It’s always the strategy,” he said. “Attack, attack, attack. And when in doubt, attack some more. The best defense is a great offense.”

