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The general election is effectively well underway, with Trump and Biden sparring over immigration, the economy, abortion and each other’s fitness for office. Biden’s State of the Union speech last week resembled a campaign curtain-raiser as he sought to reassure voters about his age and reinvigorate swaths of the Democratic coalition that are not enthused about 2024. Trump’s campaign this week took control of the Republican National Committee and fired dozens of staff as they sought to function as a single operation and catch up to Biden’s fundraising.
Biden is attacking Trump’s antiabortion record and disdain for many U.S. commitments abroad, and he is arguing that Trump poses a unique threat to American democracy after attempting to overturn the 2020 election. “Donald Trump is running a campaign of resentment, revenge, and retribution that threatens the very idea of America,” Biden said in a statement Tuesday after winning the nomination.
Trump is capitalizing on voters’ disapproval of Biden and his handling of the economy and southern border — and he is preparing for his first trial in several pending criminal cases, which have rallied the GOP but could give swing voters pause.
General elections typically draw much broader turnout than primaries, complicating efforts to draw lessons from Tuesday’s results for November. But the vote in Georgia, a key swing state where both candidates campaigned on Saturday, offered some clues to Trump’s and Biden’s political strengths and weaknesses.
Former U.N. ambassador Nikki Haley, who dropped out of the GOP primary last week, came closer to Trump in a couple of Atlanta-area counties where Democrats had big advantages in 2020. But much of her support came before Tuesday. With an estimated 78 percent of the vote counted statewide on Tuesday night, Haley had just 5 percent support among Election Day voters, compared with 21 percent among those who voted early.
After a primary race that took the candidates across the country to places including Iowa, South Carolina and California, the general election is expected to be waged largely in the battleground states of Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Georgia, Arizona and Nevada, with the possible addition of North Carolina. In 2020, Biden won six of those states, narrowly losing North Carolina to Trump. Recent polling, however, has shown Trump leading in many of the battleground states as well as nationally, as Biden faces low approval ratings.
“Biden’s biggest challenge is consolidation of the base,” Democratic strategist Joel Payne said. “Obviously, Biden is going to do a pretty robust outreach to moderates and Republicans — but the first thing he needs to do is consolidate his base.”
Biden has sought to frame the election as a choice between two vastly different presidents, hoping to make the race as much of a referendum on Trump as on himself. During the State of the Union address last week, Biden referred to “my predecessor” more than a dozen times as he blasted Trump on a range of issues including abortion, taxes, trade and health care.
Biden, 81, has recently addressed the issue of his age more directly, often reminding people that Trump is not much younger at 77. His campaign has also begun to amplify the contrast with Trump in television ads, launching a $30 million push last week.
Trump’s campaign long expected to clinch the GOP nomination by March 19 at the latest. His nomination seemed, to many, like a foregone conclusion since the Jan. 15 caucuses in Iowa, which kicked off the nominating process and crushed competitors’ hopes by delivering Trump a 30-point landslide.
Last week, the former president’s path simplified: His last standing rival, Haley, lost big on Super Tuesday as anticipated and dropped out of the race.
“It is now up to Donald Trump to earn the votes of those in our party and beyond it who did not support him, and I hope he does that,” Haley said last Wednesday, declining to offer Trump her endorsement.
Despite the bitter GOP primary, Republican voters are overwhelmingly behind Trump in the general election, according to recent polling, which suggested that Biden has more work ahead to re-create his 2020 coalition.
Trump has been especially focused on the U.S.-Mexico border in recent speeches, promising to begin “the largest domestic deportation operation in American history” and speaking in apocalyptic terms about a rise in undocumented immigration.
“I will end the agony of our people, the plunder of our cities, the sacking of our towns, the violation of our citizens and the conquest of our country,” Trump said at his Georgia rally this past weekend. “These people are conquering our country.”
Trump this week sought to delay his first trial, set to begin March 25 in New York. The former president is accused of falsifying business records to conceal hush money to an adult-film actress, and he has pleaded not guilty.
Biden, unlike Trump, faced no prominent competitors in the primary. The Democratic Party rallied behind its incumbent president and rearranged its primary calendar to kick off with South Carolina — the state that set Biden on the path to victory in 2020.
Long-shot opponent Dean Phillips, a Democratic congressman from Minnesota, ended his campaign last week after failing to win any delegates.
The most significant opposition to Biden in the primary came in the form of organized efforts to vote “uncommitted” in protest of the Biden administration’s handling of the Israel-Gaza war. “Uncommitted” made up 13 percent of the Democratic primary vote in Michigan and about 19 percent of the primary vote in Minnesota, two states with large Arab American populations.
Scott Clement contributed to this report.
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