The Maui News

Nikki Haley tries to draw New Hampshire’s independen­ts without alienating voters who backed Donald Trump

- By HOLLY RAMER

CONCORD, N.H. — Richard Anderson drove through a snowstorm last week to see his preferred candidate in New Hampshire’s Republican primary. But he’s not sure how far he’ll go to support her if she wins the nomination.

Anderson, a 73-year-old independen­t voter from Jackson, liked what he heard from Nikki Haley at the Mount Washington Hotel. But he disagrees with the former U.N. ambassador’s plan to pardon former President Donald Trump if he is convicted of any of the crimes he’s been charged with.

“That bothers me,” he said. “I’ll still vote for her in the primary, but I’ll wait to see if she’s still saying that in the general election.”

Haley’s best shot at shaking Trump’s grip on the Republican nomination rests with her ability to attract New Hampshire’s independen­t voters — including some who might not stick with her in November — without alienating too many conservati­ves. Other Republican­s have hit the right balance here, notably John McCain in two GOP primary victories. But those wins came long before Trump’s rise in politics and the Republican­s’ rightward shifts both in the state and nationally.

“It’s a very difficult needle to thread,” said Nathan Shrader, an associate professor of politics at New England College, “because if she makes too much of an overt play for the independen­t voters, that could be a turnoff for some of the Republican­s who we know in the Trump era are more conservati­ve than they might have been a generation ago.”

Democrats can’t vote in the GOP primary, but voters unaffiliat­ed with a party — who make up nearly 40 percent of registered voters in New Hampshire — can. That makes them a key target, though they aren’t a monolith.

A CNN/University of New Hampshire poll released Sunday found that a majority of registered Republican­s likely to vote in the primary — 67 percent — said they planned to vote for Trump. But a majority of those registered as undeclared — 58 percent — said they support Haley.

The poll, taken Tuesday through Friday, also found more registered Republican­s in the state view Haley unfavorabl­y (47 percent) than favorably (31 percent). Trump, meanwhile is viewed favorably by 76 percent of registered Republican­s and unfavorabl­y by just 16 percent.

Haley was viewed favorably by 42 percent of people who have registered themselves as undeclared, while 32 percent viewed her unfavorabl­y. Just 34 percent of the same group, by contrast, views Trump favorably, compared with 59 percent unfavorabl­y.

The poll was published before Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis dropped out of the race Sunday afternoon.

Some Haley supporters interviewe­d at her events are left-leaning voters who have little ideologica­l overlap with Haley but are intent on stopping Trump. Others lean Republican and agree with her policies.

Corinne Pullen is a blend of both. Pullen, a retired 68-year-old nurse from Canterbury, said she’s impressed with Haley’s “strict and strong” foreign policies and her plans to decrease federal spending. She considers Trump a “narcissist­ic braggadoci­o buffoon.”

“When I compare these two candidates, it is a no-brainer who I would feel comfortabl­e and safe having in the White House,” she said.

Trump has turned that crossover appeal into an attack line, suggesting that Haley is being propped up by “radical left Democrats.” The former president’s campaign argues Haley will struggle with conservati­ves in closed primaries like that of her home-state South Carolina, where the Feb. 24 primary is the next big matchup for her and Trump.

“Her entire focus at this point in time ... has been about turning out Democrats and behavioral Democrats to hijack the Republican primary in New Hampshire,” Trump senior advisor Chris LaCivita told reporters this month.

As if to underscore that point, Trump on Saturday arranged for South Carolina’s current governor, lieutenant governor, and several other elected leaders to come to New Hampshire to campaign with him. The day before, he won a rousing endorsemen­t from South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, whom Haley appointed to the Senate when she was governor.

Haley, however, dismissed that move.

“I won South Carolina twice as governor,” she said recently. “I think I know what favorable territory is in South Carolina. We are going to South Carolina. We’re going to be strong in South Carolina.” She added: “The road is never going to stop here in New Hampshire, that’s always been the plan.”

Dante Scala, a political science professor at the University of New Hampshire, is skeptical that Haley can pull together a strong and diverse enough coalition to top

Trump in Tuesday’s primary. Even if she did, “how do you duplicate that elsewhere?” he asked. “The answer is, you don’t. I don’t think you can pull off that magic trick in state after state.”

Unlike McCain, who openly appealed to “Republican­s, independen­ts, Democrats, Libertaria­ns, vegetarian­s, all of them,” Haley doesn’t mention independen­ts in her stump speech. But the super PAC backing her is filling its mailboxes with fliers citing her endorsemen­t from New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu, a Trump critic, and her plans on the economy and debt reduction.

Haley described herself to reporters Thursday as “a conservati­ve that knows how to talk to moderates and independen­ts and not make them feel bad, but make them feel included.”

At the same time, she pushed back against criticism from Trump and DeSantis that she isn’t conservati­ve enough.

“Show me where I’m moderate, because I’m not,” she said.

 ?? AP photo ?? Republican presidenti­al candidate former UN Ambassador Nikki Haley, center, meets with Curtis and Christina Shea during a campaign stop at Mary Ann’s Diner in Derry, N.H., on Sunday.
AP photo Republican presidenti­al candidate former UN Ambassador Nikki Haley, center, meets with Curtis and Christina Shea during a campaign stop at Mary Ann’s Diner in Derry, N.H., on Sunday.

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