The Korea Times

Biden, Trump woo Haley voters, 2024 election’s new prize

Haley supporters seen as swing voters in fierce race with small margin

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NEW YORK (Reuters) — Democrat Joe Biden and Republican Donald Trump are scrambling to win over supporters of Nikki Haley, a constituen­cy that could be crucial to sending either man back to the White House.

Haley dropped out of the Republican presidenti­al nomination contest on Wednesday but did not endorse Trump and said it was now up to him to “earn” the support of voters who did not initially back him.

Almost 570,000 voters in three key battlegrou­nd states — Nevada, North Carolina and Michigan — voted for Haley in the Republican nominating contest, a small but potentiall­y significan­t group in races that have been decided by tiny margins in recent elections.

Haley won 250,000 votes in North Carolina’s primary, for example, a state that Trump won by less than 75,000 votes in 2020.

Both Biden and Trump quickly put out statements on Wednesday calling on Haley voters to join their team — although they used vastly different tactics.

Biden commended Haley on “speaking the truth” about Trump, while Trump said he had “trounced” her in the Super Tuesday Republican contest.

“Donald Trump made it clear he doesn’t want Nikki Haley supporters. I want to be clear: There is a place for them in my campaign,” Biden said in a statement.

In his Truth Social post, Trump added that he “would further like to invite all of the Haley supporters to join the greatest movement in the history of our Nation, and described Biden as an enemy who is destroying the country.

Trump has derided Haley throughout the campaign — including using sexist and racist language. And many of her voters have wondered if they still have a place in the Republican Party, which has coalesced around Trump, despite his repeated lies about having won the 2020 election against Biden, and the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol.

Still, some experts say there’s little precedent for Republican­s like Haley’s supporters to automatica­lly come out for a Democrat in a general election.

“The next several months are going to be about the two candidates trying to convince people to come home to their regular party,” said Hans Noel, an associate professor of government at Georgetown University.

“Right now, the numbers are really high for Haley voters to say ‘I would never vote for Trump.’ But almost certainly, most of them will come around and either vote for Trump or they might not vote at all,” he said, citing historical precedent.

Political strategist­s believe a significan­t number of Haley voters were Democrats or Democratic-leaning independen­ts who crossed over to vote in Republican primary contests, to try to deliver a blow to Trump.

Still, a bevy of anti-Trump groups will be working hard to convince Haley voters to get behind Biden.

Reed Galen, a co-founder of the Lincoln Project, a prominent antiTrump group of current and former Republican­s, said Haley had shown that there are up to 30 percent of Republican voters who do not like Trump, a figure that would represent about 11 million registered Republican­s nationwide.

Galen said his group will target them between now and November’s general election, aiming $50 million at an anti-Trump, pro-Biden persuasion campaign focused on battlegrou­nd states of Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia, Wisconsin and Arizona.

The digital and TV ad campaign will focus on abortion rights, the blow to U.S. prestige abroad under Trump, and his failure to fully support Ukraine in its war against Russia.

PrimaryPiv­ot, another pro-Haley group, changed its name to Haley Voters for Biden just after Haley dropped out of the race.

Co-founder Robert Schwartz said the group will target the roughly 500,000 voters who backed Haley in the primary campaign in Michigan and North Carolina, as well as possible Haley voters in Georgia, which holds its primary on Tuesday.

Republican strategist Ford O’Connell, who worked with Trump during the 2020 campaign, said he expected Trump to extend an “olive branch” to Haley supporters but that many were not persuadabl­e.

O’Connell noted that Trump did not go after Haley in his speech on Tuesday night. Trump showed that he “understood that the way to victory is to stay on the issues: the border, prices, foreign policy,” O’Connell said.

Trump challenges Biden to debate ‘anytime, anywhere’

WASHINGTON (AFP) — Donald Trump on Wednesday challenged Joe Biden to an election debate after the two men emerged from primary voting as the all-but-certain Republican and Democratic candidates in November’s U.S. presidenti­al vote.

“It is important, for the Good of our Country, that Joe Biden and I Debate Issues that are so vital to America, and the American People,” said Trump, who ducked out of every debate in the race for the Republican nomination.

“I am calling for Debates, ANYTIME, ANYWHERE, ANYPLACE!” he wrote on his Truth Social platform.

Trump, 77, sewed up the Republican nomination during the 15-state Super Tuesday voting bonanza as he saw off sole remaining challenger Nikki Haley in every state except Vermont. Biden will almost certainly be his opponent.

Trump was repeatedly challenged by Haley and his other primary rivals to show up for the Republican­s’ televised debates, but he refused, reckoning that he had nothing to gain from sharing a spotlight with lower-polling rivals.

But he is polling within the margin of error against 81-year-old Biden and has reversed his position, saying he would even agree to debates hosted by the Democrats.

 ?? EPA-Yonhap ?? Republican U.S. presidenti­al candidate Nikki Haley walks off the stage after announcing the suspension of her presidenti­al campaign during a news conference at her headquarte­rs on Daniel Island in Charleston, S.C., Wednesday.
EPA-Yonhap Republican U.S. presidenti­al candidate Nikki Haley walks off the stage after announcing the suspension of her presidenti­al campaign during a news conference at her headquarte­rs on Daniel Island in Charleston, S.C., Wednesday.

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