The Mercury News

Haley out, so it's Trump-Biden II

Presidenti­al contest many voters have been dreading likely to be full of barbs

- By Shane Goldmacher

The exit by Nikki Haley from the Republican primary after a string of losses on Super Tuesday assured former President Donald Trump of his party's nomination, kicking off a general election contest with President Joe Biden that both sides expect will be bitter, brutal and long.

The matchup that many Americans had hoped to avoid — the 2024 sequel of Biden vs. Trump — is now an inescapabl­e reality.

It will be the country's first presidenti­al rematch in nearly 70 years, a consequent­ial yet familiar collision of starkly different visions of American power, policy and democratic governance. And it will be an eight-month slog, with two nominees who polls show are deeply unpopular and who are each determined to make the race about his opponent, leaving both bent on running exceedingl­y negative campaigns.

“I'm not the gift of all presidents,” Biden told donors at a fundraiser last month, “but I'm sure in hell better than the last guy.”

Biden has cast Trump as a threat to the very foundation­s of American democracy. He has cautiously avoided discussing the many legal threats facing the former president, including four criminal indictment­s and one trial set to begin later this month.

Trump, 77, has portrayed Biden, 81, as elderly, enfeebled

and unable to perform the basic tasks of the presidency. “It's the fascists and the communists that surround him — they're making the calls,” Trump said on Fox News on Tuesday, in a sign of the caustic and conspiracy-tinged campaign to

come. “They're calling the shots. He's not calling the shots.”

Much has changed since Biden defeated Trump four years ago.

America withdrew from Afghanista­n, Russia invaded

Ukraine, the COVID-19 pandemic receded and the stock market soared. Inflation and interest rates spiked — but unemployme­nt did not. The federal right to an abortion was swept away by the Supreme Court, border crossings surged to record highs and a mob of Trump supporters stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, during a riot that resulted in federal criminal charges against more than 1,200 people — including Trump, who is accused of being part of a conspiracy to defraud the nation by subverting the 2020 election result.

The 2024 election is expected to be a referendum on all of that, and more.

Trump has not yet formally secured the delegates needed for the nomination — that could come as early as next week — but much of the party raced to coalesce behind him Wednesday, including Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican leader who has long loathed Trump. On Thursday, Biden will have a chance to make his case for a second term during his State of the Union speech.

Biden, who ran in 2020 to restore “the soul of the nation” by wresting the White House from Trump, has made freedom a central theme of his candidacy, highlighti­ng abortion rights for women and the need for free elections for everyone. Trump has made immigratio­n an animating cause of his campaign, promising to seal the border immediatel­y if he returns to the White House, even if it requires being a “dictator,” as he put it, on Day 1.

The economy is also expected to play a critical role. Americans remain downbeat even if the economic mood has ticked upward. Biden's own approval ratings have yet to benefit after rampant inflation in 2022 drove prices upward.

Democrats are roiled by divisions over the Israel-Hamas war and the humanitari­an crisis in the Gaza Strip, with more than 100,000 primary voters in Michigan voting for “uncommitte­d” in that swing state's recent primary to protest Biden. The Biden campaign has acknowledg­ed that the president begins with soft support among some key traditiona­l Democratic constituen­cies, including younger people as well as Black and Hispanic voters.

Trump must try to reunite his party after a primary in which Haley continued to win a sizable share of votes even after her eventual defeat had appeared almost inevitable. She ran the strongest in some of the suburban communitie­s that have historical­ly swung elections.

She did not immediatel­y endorse him, putting the burden to win her supporters on him. “This is now his time for choosing,” Haley said Wednesday.

Trump must also balance campaignin­g and court dates. His first trial, over allegation­s that he made hush-money payments to a porn star during the 2016 race, is slated to begin jury selection in less than three weeks. Trump is facing 34 felony charges and a potential maximum sentence of four years in prison. He could be convicted before Election Day, a simultaneo­us campaign for the White House and criminal sentencing that would have no precedent.

Entering the general election, Biden trails in most public polling. His advisers prefer a different indicator: Democrats have outpaced Biden's low approval ratings to repeatedly win down-ballot races in 2022, 2023 and a variety of special elections.

One looming issue for Biden that he can do little to address is his age. Voters across the spectrum express concern about America's oldest president, who would be 86 at the end of a second term.

The Biden campaign has taken advantage of his incumbency to build up a financial and early organizati­onal edge over Trump.

For Trump, the 2024 election will be his third in a row atop the Republican ticket. His standing as the party standard-bearer — both politicall­y and on policy — is now undisputed, having transforme­d the party's positions on free trade, spending, entitlemen­t programs and internatio­nal affairs.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI — AP ?? Former President Donald Trump is atop the Republican presidenti­al ticket for the third consecutiv­e election.
EVAN VUCCI — AP Former President Donald Trump is atop the Republican presidenti­al ticket for the third consecutiv­e election.
 ?? ANDREW HARNIK — AP ?? President Joe Biden ran in 2020to restore “the soul of the nation.” His new fight is against the same opponent.
ANDREW HARNIK — AP President Joe Biden ran in 2020to restore “the soul of the nation.” His new fight is against the same opponent.

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