Business Day

Joe Biden and Donald Trump get their parties’ nomination­s

• Democrat and Republican leaders set for first presidenti­al rematch in nearly 70 years

- Joseph Ax and Alexandra Ulmer

President Joe Biden and former president Donald Trump both clinched their parties’ nomination on Tuesday, kicking off the first US presidenti­al election rematch in nearly 70 years.

Biden needed 1,968 delegates to win the nomination, and he passed that number on Tuesday night as results began to come in from the primary contest in Georgia, Edison Research said. Results were also coming in from Mississipp­i, Washington state, the Northern Mariana Islands and Democrats living abroad.

Hours later, Trump clinched the 1,215 delegates required to secure the Republican presidenti­al nomination as four states held contests, including Georgia, the battlegrou­nd where Trump faces criminal charges for his efforts to overturn the state’s 2020 results. There were 161 delegates at stake on Tuesday in Georgia, Hawaii, Mississipp­i and Washington state.

Biden, 81, issued a statement after he sealed the Democratic nomination, taking aim at what he called Trump’s “campaign of resentment, revenge, and retributio­n that threatens the very idea of America”.

“Voters now have a choice to make about the future of this country. Are we going to stand up and defend our democracy or let others tear it down?

“Will we restore the right to choose and protect our freedoms or let extremists take them away?” he said.

The outcome of Tuesday’s voting was essentiall­y predetermi­ned, after Trump’s last remaining rival for the Republican nomination, former UN ambassador Nikki Haley, ended her campaign after Trump’s dominant performanc­e last week on Super Tuesday, when he won 14 of 15 state contests.

DRILL, BABY, DRILL

In a video posted on social media, Trump said there was no time to celebrate, and instead put the focus on beating Biden, whom he called the “worst” president in US history. “We’re going to drill, baby, drill. We’re going to close our borders. We’re going to do things like nobody has ever seen before. And we’re going to make our nation’s economy be the best ever in the world,” said Trump.

Biden faced only token opposition in the primary campaign, though liberal activists frustrated by his support for Israel’s war in Gaza have convinced a sizeable

minority of Democrats to vote “uncommitte­d” in protest.

Both men have already turned their attention to the November 5 general election, holding duelling rallies in Georgia on Saturday.

In Rome, Georgia, 77-yearold Trump again repeated his false claim that the 2020 election was fraudulent and accused the Fulton County attorney, Fani

Willis, of prosecutin­g him for political reasons. He also attacked Biden for failing to stem the flow of migrants at the US southern border, an issue he intends to keep front and centre throughout the campaign, as he did in 2020.

The Biden campaign launched a more aggressive phase on Friday, announcing Biden would tour several battlegrou­nd states amid a $30m ad buy. The campaign said it raised $10m in the 24 hours after Biden’s State of the Union speech, adding to Democrats’ financial edge over Republican­s.

The last repeat presidenti­al matchup took place in 1956, when Republican president Dwight Eisenhower defeated former Illinois governor Adlai Stevenson, a Democrat, for the second time.

This year, voters have expressed little enthusiasm for a repeat of the bitter 2020 election, with Reuters/Ipsos public polls showing both Biden and Trump are unpopular with the majority of voters.

Trump’s myriad criminal charges — he faces 91 felony counts across four separate indictment­s — could harm his standing among the suburban, well-educated voters whose support he has historical­ly struggled to garner.

He is scheduled to become the first former American president to go on trial in a criminal case on March 25 in New York, where he faces charges that he falsified business records to hide hush money payments to a porn star.

The most serious case against him is generally thought to be the federal indictment in

Washington, DC, accusing him of plotting to reverse the 2020 election. But the case is on hold after the US Supreme Court agreed to hear Trump’s claim of presidenti­al immunity, and it is unclear whether a trial can take place before Election Day.

Biden has been dogged by the perception among a majority of voters that he is too old to serve a second four-year term, though allies believe his fiery state of the union address may serve to counter that notion.

MIGRANTS

The ongoing crisis at the USMexico border, where an influx of migrants has overwhelme­d the system, is another weakness for Biden. He has sought to transfer the blame to Trump after the former president urged congressio­nal Republican­s to kill a bipartisan border security bill that would have stepped up enforcemen­t.

The economy, as always, will be a central campaign issue.

Biden has presided over an expanding economy, with inflationa­ry pressure easing and stocks hitting all-time highs. But polls show Americans unwilling to credit the president and frustrated about high prices of items like food in the wake of the pandemic.

 ?? ?? US President Joe Biden and former president Donald Trump are heading into the November 5 election with the economy as the central issue.
US President Joe Biden and former president Donald Trump are heading into the November 5 election with the economy as the central issue.
 ?? /Reuters ?? Smears and lies:
/Reuters Smears and lies:

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