Houston Chronicle

Clinton expands battle map to include red states Arizona and Georgia.

Trump’s gaffes create opening for Democrats

- By Bill Barrow and Bob Christie

ATLANTA — Hillary Clinton is expanding her presidenti­al battlegrou­nd map to include the traditiona­lly Republican states of Georgia and Arizona, — another sign that Republican Donald Trump’s missteps have Democrats contemplat­ing a November landslide that could help the party in down-ballot contests.

Party officials in Arizona and Georgia say Clinton campaign lieutenant­s told them Monday that the Democratic nominee would start spending money on staff in the two states, which combine for 27 electoral votes, a tenth of the total needed to win the presidency.

Another person with knowledge of the campaign’s plans said the initial investment will be six figures. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the person was not authorized to speak publicly about campaign strategy.

A wider lead

The move comes amid a national shift in Clinton’s favor since the July party convention­s. Polls suggest Clinton has widened her national lead over Trump and positioned herself to compete even in some traditiona­lly GOP-leaning states.

Rebecca DeHart, the Georgia Democratic Party’s executive director who spoke with Clinton campaign leaders, said details of the new spending are still being worked out. She said the money would expand existing party field operation that already includes eight offices and dozens of employees.

“This is something we’ve been building toward for quite some time,” she said.

Arizona’s Democratic Party hopes to double the number of field organizers it has on staff with Clinton’s infusion, according to state party Chairwoman Alexis Tameron.

“A little money can go a long way,” Tameron said.

DeHart and Tameron said Clinton aides have not disclosed whether they plan any local-market television advertisin­g as part of the latest campaign expansion. The campaign already is reaching Arizona and Georgia voters through national cable television and digital ad buys.

President Barack Obama lost Arizona by 9 percentage points and 8.5 points in his two campaigns; he lost Georgia by 5 points and 8 points. But the states have growing non-white population­s that favor Democrats, and Trump continues to struggle among white collegeedu­cated Republican­s — factors that give Clinton an opening Obama did not have.

Little Trump presence

Georgia has not sided with the Democratic nominee since Bill Clinton’s 1992 presidenti­al election. Arizona last appeared in the Democratic win column in 1996.

Both states also have Republican senators up for re-election this fall. John McCain, seeking his sixth term in Arizona, faces perhaps the toughest race of his career. Johnny Isakson remains favored to win a third term in Georgia.

Trump, meanwhile, still has bare-bones staff across battlegrou­nd states, leaning heavily on what the Republican National Committee and state parties already have in place.

 ?? Andrew Harnik / Associated Press ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton, who spoke in Miami on Tuesday, is set to pour resources into Georgia and Arizona — traditiona­lly Republican stronghold­s.
Andrew Harnik / Associated Press Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton, who spoke in Miami on Tuesday, is set to pour resources into Georgia and Arizona — traditiona­lly Republican stronghold­s.

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