Santa Cruz Sentinel

Biden's reelection campaign sees `viable pathways' to 2024 win

- By Will Weissert

>> President Joe Biden's reelection campaign is vowing to hold the states that won him the White House in 2020 but also compete in places it lost like North Carolina and increasing­ly Republican-dominated Florida, providing what it says are “a number of viable pathways to the 270 electoral votes” needed to clinch four more years.

Offering her first extensive comments on strategy since she was named manager of Biden's campaign last month, Julie Chavez Rodriguez wrote in a memo to “interested parties” that the 2024 race presents “significan­t opportunit­ies to grow Democratic support.” It was released while Biden was traveling in Japan, but he is skipping previously planned, subsequent stops in Australia and Papua New Guinea to focus on debt limit talks in Washington.

Rodriguez said the reelection campaign is planning early investment­s to try to retain battlegrou­nd states Biden won in 2020 including Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvan­ia, Nevada and New Hampshire, and to hold Georgia and Arizona, which hadn't voted Democratic in a presidenti­al race in decades prior to three years ago.

But the campaign will also “look to expand the map even further in states like North Carolina and Florida” and Rodriguez said both would be included in a “7-figure” advertisin­g buy that encompasse­d investment­s in a string of swing states.

Biden's reelection campaign is built around asking Americans to allow him to “finish the job” he started, and has sought to paint “extreme” Republican­s like former President Donald Trump and supporters of his “Make America Great Again” movement as threats to core American political values.

Trump is now seeking the White House for a third time, and while Rodriguez's memo did not mention him by name, it did predict Biden would “prevail over the MAGA extremist agenda once again.”

Biden's political advisers have long argued that Biden beat Trump once and can do so again. If someone else captures the GOP presidenti­al nomination — like Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who is widely seen as a top Trump alternativ­e — Biden's team maintains the same strategy can work since most top Republican­s have done little to distance themselves from the MAGA movement.

Though Rodriguez's memo makes no mention of it, contrastin­g Biden with his opponent may be the president's strongest reelection tactic. An Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll last month found that only about half of Democrats think the 80-year-old Biden should run again, though 81% said they would at least probably support him in the 2024 general election if he is the nominee.

The memo says the reelection campaign plans to spread its message online and through in-person contacts with voters, but will rely heavily on leveraging voters' existing social circles.

“While trust in the media may have eroded, trust in people's personal networks has never been stronger,” Rodriguez wrote.

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