“I have never led in any poll or been popular in any survey that has ever been done,” said Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin. “And here I am.” | Rodney Lamkey Jr. for POLITICO Elections Kentucky governor facing reelection voices support for Trump

Gov. Matt Bevin, a Kentucky Republican facing reelection this fall, said Friday he would be "delighted" to have President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence stump for him during next year's campaign.

Elected in 2015, Bevin is the least popular governor in the nation facing reelection next year, according to a Morning Consult poll released last month that showed him with a 51 percent disapproval rating. His election marked a break from the norm for Kentucky, which has a history of resisting Republican candidates at the state level but electing them to federal office.


Bevin, in an interview at POLITICO's State Solutions Conference on Friday, dismissed polling that shows him as unpopular.

“I have never led in any poll or been popular in any survey that has ever been done,” Bevin said. “And here I am.”

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The Kentucky governor also lauded the Trump administration’s efforts to modernize trade with China, a dynamic relationship he’s aimed to boost over the course of his gubernatorial tenure. He said he and the president speak on the phone on a regular basis about trade and other issues.

“It’s moving us into the 21st century reality of trade that exists,” Bevin said at POLITICO’s State Solutions Conference. “Is it perfect? No.”

“But,” the governor added, “if we get to things that both sides can live with, this is what good grade policy looks like.”