Trump’s New York intervention

Rep. Mike Lawler (R-N.Y.) at a D.C. event in September. Photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

President Trump is subtly giving a yellow light to Rep. Mike Lawler as the swing district Republican contemplates a run for New York governor.

Why it matters: Trump is taking steps to clear the Republican primary field for Rep. Elise Stefanik, bolstering an ally once poised to serve in his administration, Axios’ Alex Isenstadt reports.

  • Said one Trump ally: “This is an all-out effort to make sure Lawler doesn’t leave the House.”

😈 Lawler is a public face in the brash fight to raise the SALT cap, which hits higher-income New Yorkers hard. (Stefanik’s also working to raise the cap.)

  • “He wouldn’t have a f—ing gavel without the members of the SALT caucus,” Lawler said of House Ways and Means Chair Jason Smith (R-Mo.) this week.
  • “Shockingly the ‘Jewish Space Laser’ lady once again doesn’t have a clue,” Lawler told Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) yesterday after she accused him of undermining the MAGA agenda by threatening to tank the “big beautiful bill” over the state and local tax cap fight.

💸 But Lawler’s negotiating leverage — that the party wouldn’t have the majority without swing-seat Republicans like him — is part of why Trump allies are so worried about him running for governor.

  • Republicans close to the White House are circulating a spreadsheet that ballparks it’d cost $14 million in TV advertising to keep Lawler’s seat if he didn’t seek reelection.

📲 Zoom in: Trump has not tapped out an ALL CAPS endorsement for Stefanik, who was supposed to be ensconced by now as his UN ambassador.

  • But he’s endorsed two of Stefanik’s potential rivals for governor — Lawler and Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman — for reelection to their current posts.
  • The moves appeared aimed at taking Lawler and Blakeman out of contention for governor, three Republicans close to the White House told us.
  • Stefanik hasn’t asked the White House to clear the field for her, according to a person close to her.

— Alex Isenstadt and Hans Nichols – Axios