Morning Sun

Iowa doors swing open for Republican­s eyeing White House

- By Thomas Beaumont

CEDAR RAPIDS, IOWA » The polls were closed in Iowa for less than 48 hours when South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott was shaking hands and posing for pictures with eastern Iowa Republican­s at a Cedar Rapids country club last week.

Scott, one of the many Republican­s testing their presidenti­al ambitions, hardly has the state to himself.

At least a half-dozen GOP presidenti­al prospects are planning Iowa visits this summer, forays that are advertised as promoting candidates and the state Republican organizati­on ahead of the fall midterm elections. But in reality, the trips are about building relationsh­ips and learning the political geography in the state scheduled to launch the campaign for the party’s 2024 nomination.

While potential presidenti­al candidates have dipped into Iowa for more than a year, the next round of visits marks a new phase of the ritual. With Iowa’s June 7 primary out of the way, Republican­s eyeing the White House can step up their travel and not worry about stepping into the state’s intraparty rivalries.

“Now that it’s done, it’s full-bore,” state GOP Chairman Jeff Kauffman said. “It’s unfettered.”

Beyond Scott, former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley is expected to visit late this month, and plans to campaign with as many Iowa congressio­nal Republican candidates as she can in a little more than two days.

Haley, who is also the former governor of South Carolina, another early-voting state in the presidenti­al calendar, plans to begin her trip in eastern Iowa on June 29 with first-term Rep. Mariannett­e Millermeek­s. She’ll also headline a state GOP fundraiser in Dubuque.

Working from the Mississipp­i Valley westward, she plans to keynote a fundraiser for Gov. Kim Reynolds. Haley will also campaign with Zach Nunn, chosen to face two-term Democratic Rep. Cindy Axne, who is among the most vulnerable House members this year. Haley’s still-fluid schedule also includes attending Rep. Randy Feenstra’s annual fundraiser in Gop-heavy western Iowa.

Arkansas Sen. Tom Cotton, who visited several times in 2021, is expected the first week in July to speak at the county GOP dinner in Story County in central Iowa.

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