New York Daily News

IT’S DON’S RAGE AND JOE’S AGE

Now that it seems certain the rematch nobody wanted is inevitable, here are the key points

- BY DAVE GOLDINER

The election rematch few Americans want started in earnest Wednesday as former President Donald Trump wrapped up the Republican nomination and rival Nikki Haley suspended her campaign.

Trump has been working for months to turn back primary challenges and get Republican­s behind his comeback campaign for the White House after four years out of power.

That goal was sealed after he scored a sweeping victory in the Super Tuesday primaries.

President Biden was already the presumptiv­e 2024 Democratic nominee even before he brushed off nominal primary challenges to his reelection bid.

Now, Biden hopes to utilize Thursday night’s State of the Union address to kick off his presidenti­al campaign against Trump, a contrast he hopes will rally voters behind him despite concerns about his age and other potential political weak spots.

Here are some takeaways:

What will Joe say in SOTU?

Biden has a rare national platform to make his opening argument to Americans for why he deserves four more years in the White House.

Look for Biden to boast about his achievemen­ts and to pitch himself as uniquely qualified to lead the country and the world through a challengin­g period — and paint a sharp contrast with the chaos under Trump.

The stakes are quite high. With voters on both sides of the aisle concerned about Biden’s age, any perceived gaffe could harden pre-existing opinions that he is just too old to serve.

On the other hand, Biden has the opportunit­y to cut through the political noise and demonstrat­e his often-underrated political skills.

Who benefits from the general election matchup being set?

Pundits have been puzzled by the persistent­ly high number of Americans who did not believe that Biden and Trump would actually be their parties’ candidates for the White House.

Democratic strategist­s in particular believe that Biden could benefit from the matchup between the two men now being set in stone.

Team Biden believes that Democratic voters may start focusing on Trump, a candidate many of them loathe and is perhaps the biggest motivator for them to get behind anyone running against him.

Can Trump rally Republican critics who backed Nikki Haley?

For Trump, the immediate challenge is to win over Republican­s who supported Nikki Haley in the just-completed primary fight.

“Clearly there are a quarter to a third of the people who voted in the Republican primaries … who simply won’t accept him or don’t wan’t him back in the White House,” Larry Sabato, a University of Virginia political analyst, said on CNN.

If past is prologue, Trump will likely seek to project strength with the Republican base as way to bring “traditiona­l Republican­s” back in he fold, Sabato added.

But Republican strategist Doug Heye noted that it won’t be a cakewalk for Trump, given that he deliberate­ly sought to push away Haley supporters by declaring them “permanentl­y banned” from his MAGA movement.

“That is dumb,” Heye told the News. “Anyone wearing a

‘Permanentl­y Banned’ T-shirt is unlikely to return to the fold of the person insulting them.”

It appears that Trump’s mounting legal woes may not be the massive political headache they once seemed certain to pose.

So far, Trump’s indictment on 91 felonies and his four looming criminal trials have not damaged his political standing.

If anything, he has succeeded in using the trials to rally his supporters behind the idea that he is being unfairly targeted by liberal prosecutor­s.

Can Biden unify a fractured Democratic coalition?

The incumbent president has a unity problem of his own.

Biden is facing serious dissatisfa­ction with Democratic voters, some of whom are disenchant­ed over his handling of the economy or blame him for the influx of migrants across the southern border and into northern cities.

The most visible split is over Biden’s handling of Israel’s war in Gaza. Critics have mounted modestly successful campaigns to register opposition to the war in states like Michigan, where 13% of Democrats shunned him to vote for “uncommitte­d” delegates.

Polls show Biden suffering from relatively low approval with Latinos, Blacks and young voters, all key portions of the Democratic base.

That’s a flashing danger sign for the incumbent. But it’s also an opportunit­y for Biden to win back voters who traditiona­lly back the Democrat in the end.

Sabato notes that the White House needs to do a much better job communicat­ing his policy achievemen­ts on issues like the economy and abortion rights.

“They have got to use the campaign and the State of the Union address to make it clear what they have actually done,” he said.

 ?? ?? President Biden and former President Donald Trump are headed for another collision in November, four years after Biden booted Trump from the White House and unleashed an endless torrent of political and legal drama.
President Biden and former President Donald Trump are headed for another collision in November, four years after Biden booted Trump from the White House and unleashed an endless torrent of political and legal drama.
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