Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Biden, Trump look past primaries

As 2 candidates take on role of nominee, Haley vows to fight

- By Steve Peoples

NEW YORK — Barely 400,000 votes have been cast in two rural Republican primaries over the span of eight days. But both Donald Trump and President Joe Biden are behaving like their parties’ nominees already.

Trump’s double-digit victory Tuesday in independen­t-minded New Hampshire, where he was considered more vulnerable than perhaps anywhere else, was a rhetorical tipping point for both Democrats and Republican­s.

“It is now clear that Donald Trump will be the Republican nominee. And my message to the country is the stakes could not be higher,” President Joe Biden said hours after Trump’s victory Tuesday night.

Trump’s team largely agreed, even as he raged about his former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley’s unwillingn­ess to leave the race altogether.

“I say the general election begins tonight,” said Trump-adversary-turned-advocate Vivek Ramaswamy, who was standing at the former president’s side during his New Hampshire victory speech. “And this man will win it in a landslide.”

The bluster is just a sliver of what’s to come over the next 10 months. Both parties are building out sprawling political operations backed by billions of dollars in advertisin­g to shape the all-but-certain general election rematch between the current president and his predecesso­r.

It is a matchup that many voters and some elected officials have said they did not want. Both Biden and Trump have loud detractors within their parties and glaring political liabilitie­s. Yet no other Republican presidenti­al candidate in history has won the first two contests on the primary calendar, as Trump polished off Tuesday night, and failed to clinch his party’s nomination. And Biden, who won New Hampshire’s Demo

cratic primary without even appearing on the ballot via a write-in campaign, is facing only token opposition in his bid for the Democratic nomination.

Hours before Biden’s New Hampshire win was official, the president shifted two key aides from the White House to his Delaware-based campaign. On Wednesday, Biden served as the keynote speaker at a United Auto Workers political convention in Washington, where he accepted the group’s endorsemen­t. The auto workers’ decision marks a significan­t step in the president’s push to win over blue-collar workers in critical Midwestern swing states.

Meanwhile, Trump heads to Phoenix on Friday to address Republican­s in a swing state that Biden won by 10,000 votes in 2020.

But as much as Trump’s team would like to shift its full focus toward Biden, one Republican rival is still standing. And at least for now, Haley is still consuming a significan­t amount of Trump’s attention.

The former president’s campaign unveiled a new anti-Haley website on Wednesday as Trump railed against her repeatedly on social media.

“Could somebody please explain to Nikki that she lost — and lost really badly,” Trump wrote on his social media network. “She also lost Iowa, BIG, last week. They were, as certain non-fake media say, ‘CRUSHING DEFEATS.’ ”

Haley’s team vowed on Wednesday to continue fighting Trump for the GOP nomination, even with the prospect looming of an embarrassi­ng home-state primary defeat in South Carolina on Feb. 24.

“New Hampshire is first in the nation. It is not last in the nation,” Haley declared before leaving Tuesday night. “This race is far from over. There are dozens of states left to go.”

Indeed, primary contests are scheduled in every U.S. state and territory over the next five months ahead of each party’s summertime national convention­s. The earliest either Trump or Biden could clinch enough delegates to become his party’s presumptiv­e nominee is March.

Haley’s campaign launched a new $4 million advertisin­g campaign in South Carolina on Wednesday, describing the prospect of a Biden-Trump general election as “a rematch no one wants.”

“Biden — too old. Trump — too much chaos,” the narrator says. “There’s a better choice for a better America.”

Early next week, Haley is scheduled to do a fundraisin­g tour that includes stops in New York, Florida, California, Texas and South Carolina.

She’s expected to continue to draw donor support, despite Trump’s grip on the nomination, because significan­t forces within the GOP do not want him to represent their party in the general election.

Indeed, there were new warning signs about Trump’s broader political standing tucked within New Hampshire’s results that raised questions about his strength in the general election.

Haley beat Trump on Tuesday among Republican primary voters who identified as either moderates or independen­ts, according to AP VoteCast, a survey of the electorate. She also beat Trump among voters with college degrees.

About half of the state’s Republican primary voters also said they are very or somewhat concerned that Trump is too extreme to win the general election.

And about one-third believe that Trump broke the law — in his alleged attempt to interfere in the vote count in the 2020 presidenti­al election, his role in what happened at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, or with the classified documents found at his Florida home after he left the White House.

 ?? DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Donald Trump walks backstage after his primary win Tuesday in Nashua, N.H.
DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES Donald Trump walks backstage after his primary win Tuesday in Nashua, N.H.

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