Daily News (Los Angeles)

Chunk of GOP primary voters wouldn’t cast ballots for Trump

- By Linley Sanders, Jesse Bedayn and Amelia Thomson-Deveaux

WASHINGTON »

A small but substantia­l chunk of Republican primary and caucus voters say they would be so dissatisfi­ed if Donald Trump became the party’s presidenti­al nominee that they would not vote for him in November’s general election, according to AP VoteCast.

An analysis of the data shows that many of those voters were unlikely to vote for Trump, some even before this year, but it still points to potential problems for the former president as he looks to consolidat­e the nomination and pivot toward an expected rematch with Democratic President Joe Biden.

According to AP VoteCast surveys of the first three head-to-head Republican contests, 2 in 10 Iowa voters, onethird of New Hampshire voters, and one-quarter of South Carolina voters would be so disappoint­ed by Trump’s renominati­on that they would refuse to vote for him in the fall.

This unwillingn­ess to contemplat­e a presidenti­al vote for Trump isn’t confined to voters in the earliest states.

Lee and Bill Baltzell defected from the Republican Party to register as independen­ts a year ago. They attended a rally for supporters of Trump’s last major rival, former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley, last week in Centennial, Colorado, to encourage her to keep running against Trump.

“We don’t know that Trump will run into more legal problems and be disqualifi­ed, and I’d rather not see Biden in there for another four years,” said Bill Baltzell, 60.

If it’s between Biden and Trump, Lee Baltzell, 58, said she would consider writing in an alternativ­e.

“I don’t know. I did not vote for Biden the last time; I don’t know that I could do it this time. But I don’t know if I could vote for Trump.”

Opposition from voters like the Baltzells hasn’t slowed Trump’s march toward the nomination, but it could be an issue for him later on. It’s not clear how much of a problem, though, because a dive into the numbers shows that many of the “never-Trump” voters in the early states were unlikely to vote for him in the general election to begin with.

Many of the voters who said they wouldn’t vote for Trump as the nominee aren’t Republican­s at all. In the first three head-to-head contests, anywhere from 17% to 31% of the voters who said they wouldn’t support Trump in the general election identified as Democrats, and between 14% and 27% identified as independen­ts.

Even for some of those Republican­s,

voting for Trump was already a tough sell. Anywhere between one-half and two-thirds of the staunchly anti-Trump voters in the early contests said they had voted for Biden in 2020.

Then there is the fact that primaries tend to draw out the people with the most passionate opinions. Voter turnout in primaries and caucuses, particular­ly ones that are relatively uncompetit­ive, is typically lower than it would be in a general election.

Still, about 1 in 10 early contest voters who said they supported Trump in the 2020 general election said they wouldn’t be doing so this year.

One question, though, is whether that means they would vote for Trump’s opponent instead.

“I won’t vote for Trump, I’ll just say that. I voted for him twice; I could never vote for him again,” said Linda Binkley, 74, a registered Republican who isn’t pleased by the prospect of a Trump vs. Biden matchup. She added, “I’m not sure I can vote for Biden.”

If Trump becomes the nominee, he will likely need to win over some of the moderates who supported Biden in 2020 if he wants to return to the White House. From that perspectiv­e, even a small amount of opposition from within his own party — not to mention broader skepticism among independen­ts — could be a problem in the future.

 ?? MIKE STEWART — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A voting sign is seen near a voting center at Croft Baptist Church on Feb. 24 in Spartanbur­g, S.C.
MIKE STEWART — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A voting sign is seen near a voting center at Croft Baptist Church on Feb. 24 in Spartanbur­g, S.C.

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