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adamkaz/iStock(WASHINGTON) — For the first time this year, President Donald Trump on Thursday will bring his campaign roadshow to a state he lost in 2016: New Hampshire.

The president will hold his latest “Keep America Great” rally at the SNHU Arena in Manchester, marking what the Trump campaign said will be its first big step in ensuring what it couldn’t do in 2016: Flip the Granite State red.

Losing New Hampshire in 2016 has appeared to be a sore spot for the president, but the reelection team said it’s confident he will carry the state in 2020 despite potential indicators otherwise.

“New Hampshire is absolutely part of our winning strategy,” Tim Murtaugh, the Trump campaign communications director, told ABC News.

The campaign also hopes to flip New Mexico, Nevada, Minnesota and Oregon.

And the president’s New Hampshire loss won’t be the only 2016 relic hovering over the rally on Thursday: Former Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski has said he’s “seriously considering” a 2020 Senate run in the Granite State. And Lewandowski is set to travel on Air Force One Thursday for the rally, with rumors swirling about a possible announcement.

The president will make his case to voters in New Hampshire, a state with a serious independent streak, on the heels of ramping up divisive rhetoric and as critics and 2020 Democratic candidates have blamed that rhetoric for inspiring violence against minorities, including the recent massacre in El Paso, Texas.

And while the president lost New Hampshire by fewer than 3,000 votes, in 2020 it could be a taller task as Democrats have flipped the state’s House and Senate since 2016.

The president’s support remains underwater but steady in New Hampshire, with a 53 percent disapproval rating, a 42 percent approval rating contrasted and 5 percent unsure, according to a recent University of New Hampshire poll.

Trump’s campaign said the president is banking on appealing to voters in New Hampshire by pushing for more manufacturing jobs and by touting steps he’s taken toward battling the opioid epidemic, in addition to the economy.

“We are working to retain the supporters and voters that he had in 2016, and bring in new ones,” Murtaugh said.

Just two weeks after winning in 2016 but losing New Hampshire, Trump tweeted that there was “serious voter fraud” there.

After taking office, the president created a short-lived Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity that found no evidence of widespread voter fraud, according to a former member of the Trump administration’s now-disbanded commission.

The president’s campaign declined to comment to ABC News when asked whether Trump still believes he lost the state because of voter fraud.

Copyright © 2019, ABC Radio. All rights reserved.

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