Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Clinton gears up to face Trump in fall campaign

- By Lisa Lerer, Julie Pace and Ken Thomas

She isn't yet the Democratic nominee, but Hillary Clinton is taking steps into a general election campaign.

Waves of campaign staffers are being dispatched to battlegrou­nd states. Advisers are starting to consider locations for a splashy convention rally in Philadelph­ia. An army of lawyers is scrutinizi­ng more than two dozen possible vice presidenti­al picks.

Though she has yet to clinch the Democratic nomination, Hillary Clinton and her team are taking early steps into a general election campaign. Aides are working under the assumption that Republican front-runner Donald Trump will be her opponent.

Six months before the presidenti­al elec t i on, they’re looking beyond primary rival Bernie Sanders and preparing their candidate and party for what may be a hard-fought — and personally ugly — fall campaign.

Starting this week, Clinton campaign employees are being deployed to battlegrou­nd states across the country, among them Ohio, Florida and Colorado. Democrats are also eyeing the possibilit­y of making a run at traditiona­lly Republican­leaning states such as Georgia, North Carolina and Arizona, calculatin­g that Trump’s penchant for controvers­y could put minority and female voters in play.

“Everybody’s got their game face on,” said Rep. Tim Ryan, D-Ohio, who was going to South Dakota on the weekend to campaign for Clinton.

Aides from the primary are getting general election marching orders. Simone Ward, political director of the campaign committee for Senate Democratic races, will run Clinton’s Florida operation. Emmy Ruiz, who led a crucial Nevada primary win for Clinton, will handle Colorado. Mike Vlacich led New Hampshire operations in the primary and will do the same in the fall.

“The sooner you can get up and running the better,” said Dan Pfeiffer, who advised President Barack Obama. “On the Republican side, Trump has not built anything resembling the sort of field operation it takes to win.”

Plans are also beginning to take shape for a convention that will prominentl­y feature Obama, Vice President Joe Biden, Michelle Obama, Bill Clinton and the vice presidenti­al nominee. It’s not clear what role Sanders will have at the convention.

Taking a page f rom Obama’s 2008 convention address at Mile High Stadium in Denver, former Pennsylvan­ia Gov. Ed Rendell, a close Clinton ally, is urging the campaign to hold a major speech — perhaps even Clinton’s acceptance address — outside Independen­ce Hall, where the Constituti­on was signed.

Clinton’s campaign has started the internal search for a running mate, though people familiar with the process say that effort is in an early stage.

A team of lawyers is poring through informatio­n about a lengthy list of Democrats, among them Labor Secretary Tom Perez, Ohio Sen. Sherrod Brown and Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine. Other names mentioned by party insiders include Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, Minnesota Sen. Al Franken, New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker and Housing Secretary Julian Castro. No final decision is expected until Republican­s hold their convention.

The search for a running mate is being overseen by campaign chairman John Podesta and Clinton confidante Cheryl Mills, both of whom will help cull the list down to a handful of names in the coming weeks. Clinton advisers are debating whether it’s more important to select a strong liberal champion from the Rust Belt to woo Sanders backers and cut into Trump’s advantage with working-class white men, or to acknowledg­e her support among minority voters with a more history-making pick. They note that Clinton’s — and her husband’s — personal chemistry with the eventual choice will be a key factor.

Clinton has begun broadening her message against Trump, calling for the party to unify around her and shying away from nearly all mention of Sanders.

Her team anticipate­s that Trump will use genderbase­d attacks against Clinton, probably resurrecti­ng his criticisms from earlier this year on her husband’s sexual history. This week, her campaign spent days highlighti­ng — and raising money from — Trump’s comments that Clinton’s political success was due to her playing the “woman’s card.”

An all-but-settled Democratic race also allows Clinton to raise money and cut primary spending on ads. She’s planning a spree of lucrative fundraiser­s in New York, Michigan, California and Texas next month and has no ads running in coming primary contests.

Priorities USA Action, a super PAC backing Clin- ton’s candidacy, is preparing to spend $90 million on television ads attacking Trump in seven states starting June 8 — the day after the California primary. An additional $35 million is being reserved for digital ads aimed at bolstering Clinton’s coalition of black, Latino and younger voters. The group says it may go up on the air sooner, if Sanders drops out of the race.

Emily’s List, an advocacy organizati­on that backs female Democratic candidates, has hired a New York ad agency to help market to millennial voters, a group that Clinton has struggled to win over in the primaries.

The effort is testing messages attacking Trump and aimed at motivating young women to come out for Clinton, as part of a $20 million project to elect the first woman as president.

“Mi l l ennial women are outraged by Donald Trump,” said Denise Feriozzi, the group’s deputy executive director. “It’s our job to turn that outrage into votes.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Hillary Clinton waves during her presidenti­al primary election night rally in Philadelph­ia on Tuesday.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Hillary Clinton waves during her presidenti­al primary election night rally in Philadelph­ia on Tuesday.
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