The Republican Party is all in on President Donald Trump with one week before the midterm elections he's going all out for them. Undeterred by the string of deadly horrors that might have paused another president in campaign mode, Trump is stumping relentlessly in a late push to save the GOP House and Senate majorities, using rallies and Twitter to stoke fear over a group of migrants nearly 1,000 miles from the US border while boosting false claims from Republican candidates about their efforts to tear up one of Obamacare's most popular features. Trump will travel to Pittsburgh to show support for the community after a gunman killed 11 congregants at a synagogue in the deadliest anti-Semitic attack in US history. Operatives in both parties and nonpartisan analysts have coalesced around a view that Republicans appear likely to benefit from a favorable map and keep control of the Senate, perhaps even padding their majority. But the GOP's grip on the House is slipping. After two years of unified Republican rule, the Democratic Party's base is rallying around a crop of first time candidates and now has a variety of potential paths to winning the 23 seats they need to regain a measure of control on Capitol Hill. Trump has said that he shouldn't be blamed for a Republican midterm wipeout, That even beyond pride, he has a lot to lose on Election Day.