Trump promotes U.S. strength in Texas and raises his campaign

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By Reuters

MIDLAND, Texas – U.S. President Donald Trump raised $7 million in cross-contributions to the crusades at a stop in Texas to announce power policies he hopes will contrast sharply with his Democratic rival Joe Biden.

Trump’s 16th position in Texas as president comes at a time when several polls show him in a strangely tight career with Biden in Texas, a state that has voted Republican in presidential campaigns for the past three decades.

Trump won the state through nine percentage issues about Democrat Hillary Clinton in 2016. Texas Republican Sen. Ted Cruz has sounded the alarm at fear that Democrats might win in Texas in the November 3 election.

Trump has earned a bad complaint about his handling of the coronavirus pandemic, so he noted as a non-interventionist technique he tried to replace last week with calls to Americans to wear masks and practice social estrangement.

At two fundraising events in Odessa, Texas, Trump raised $7 million for Trump Victory, a fundraising committee that his re-election campaign, the Republican National Committee and states parties.

He then traveled through Midland, Texas, to Double Eagle Energy, a subsidized bituminous shale oil and fuel company through the personal equity corporation Apollo Global Management.

Trump’s tax and regulatory cuts have benefited power and boosted U.S. oil and fuel production.

The president tried to show the electoral crusade that Biden would adopt green policies promoted by Democratic liberal lawmakers that would reverse fossil fuel production at the expense of American jobs and economic growth.

In his speech on the oil rig’s dry, dusty, hot siege, Trump denounced what he called the “radical left” power policies and promised the industry green policies aimed at generating more renewable energy.

“We’ll tell politicians in Washington looking to abolish American power: don’t play with Texas,” he said.

Trump arrived in Texas when many oil corporations are preparing to launch their worst quarterly effects in years due to the pandemic slowing. Oil corporations Halliburton and Schlumberger NV recorded multibillion-dollar losses in their June quarters.

Exxon and Chevron were expected to report significant losses on Friday. It should be noted that many small-powered corporations have won federal cash to rescue the pandemic, according to a Federal Reserve Bank survey.

(Reports through Steve Holland; Additional reports through Gary McWilliams in Houston; edited through Grant McCool)

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