ELECTIONS
Republicans think Biden is an ‘easy target’ to
unite their party
After months of division over abortion, Ukraine and
Trump’s legal troubles, Biden’s announcement might be the reset Republicans
need.
By ADAM
WREN and NATALIE ALLISON
04/25/2023
06:00 AM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2023/04/25/biden-to-unite-gop-00093586
President
Joe Biden launched a second campaign for the presidency — and Republicans
couldn’t be more thrilled about it.
GOP
officials aren’t overly pollyannaish about their prospects of winning back the
White House, though they think they’re good. But the possibility of being able
to simply talk about Biden rather than all their internal party drama has them
downright giddy.
For weeks,
Republicans have been dogged by Donald Trump’s legal sideshows in four separate
jurisdictions, riven by disagreements over abortion and Russia’s war against
Ukraine, and unsteadied by some of the former president’s rivals taking shots
at its putative party leader.
GOP
operatives and candidates say now that Biden has announced his reelection bid,
Republicans will have a chance to reset the contours of the race.
“He’s such
an easy target,” said David Carney, a Republican strategist based in New
Hampshire. Lower-polling candidates also stand to benefit, Carney said. They
can more directly make their case for taking on the president in November 2024.
“It’s a
good applause line — ‘I’m going to kick the shit out of Biden’ — everyone likes
that on our side,” Carney added. “It gives a very safe topic to talk about.”
Already,
those vying for the nomination are eager to turn attention to the other party.
Vivek Ramaswamy, a 37-year-old biotech entrepreneur fighting to boost his
standing out of the low-single digits, said Monday that Biden’s expected
announcement “solidifies what the opposition looks like.” And he noted that
Biden — like Trump in 2020 — is unlikely to face any primary debates, despite
having at least two Democratic opponents and being unpopular even among his own
base.
“I think
that helps sharpen the case I’m making that this isn’t even about Republicans
and Democrats,” Ramaswamy said. “It’s about the managerial class versus the
everyday citizen, and the Democratic Party and the leadership of it all the way
up to Biden represents the managerial class.”
Nachama
Soloveichik, communications director of Nikki Haley’s presidential campaign,
said her team welcomes the opportunity to make a contrast with the current
president.
“Joe
Biden’s administration has been defined by weakness and incompetence,”
Soloveichik said in a statement to POLITICO. “Nikki Haley is running for
president to make America strong and proud, and we will continue to contrast
her hard work and positive vision with Biden’s hide-in-the-basement campaign.”
Opposition
parties long for races to be referendums on the person in power. And the desire
for the current 2024 GOP field to turn the spotlight on Biden echoes how
Democrats felt about Trump in 2020 and — before then — how Republicans felt
about former President Barack Obama.
“Now the
cat’s out of the bag,” is how Ward Baker, a Nashville-based GOP strategist, put
it. “We have someone to run against.”
But that
desire to shift the focus onto the current president is even more acute this
cycle as Republicans face major existential questions of their own. GOP
candidates are desperately trying to avoid issues that have proven to be
political minefields — abortion, the war in Ukraine, reforming Medicare and
more — all while wrestling with the legal troubles besetting their own
frontrunner.
“For
elected officials and party leaders, knowing that it’s Biden will be a useful
thing,” said David Kochel, the veteran Iowa Republican strategist.
Jim
McLaughlin, the veteran Republican pollster who works for Trump, predicted that
Biden’s official announcement could boost the former president even more,
assuming that Trump himself drew effective contrasts with his successor.
“The more
he talks about issues, and the more he stays focused on issues, the better off
he is, because then he can contrast his record versus Joe Biden’s on issue
after issue,” McLaughlin continued. “Voters think the country was doing better
and Donald Trump did a better job than Joe Biden on the issues that they care
about most.”
Even Trump
skeptics within the Republican ranks agreed that Biden officially jumping in
could boost the former president. “It’s definitely good for Republicans,” said
Mike Madrid, the Republican strategist and co-founder of the anti-Trump Lincoln
Project. “It’s definitely good for Trump. It literally gives Trump the matchup
that he needs to start defining the contours of the race.”
Of course,
it remains an open question how and even whether Trump will take advantage of
Biden’s reelection launch. On Thursday, at his first public rally following
Biden’s announcement, Trump plans to appear in Manchester. But that will also
come just days after jury selection gets underway in a civil trial over
allegations that he raped the magazine columnist E. Jean Carroll. Trump denies
the allegations.
All of
which could lead to Trump reverting to the mean.
“Trump
actually likes attacking Republicans more than he likes attacking Democrats,”
Kochel said. “That’s going to remain a feature of his approach.”
Polling
shows that neither Trump nor Biden are names that most voters want to see on a
November 2024 ballot — but particularly not Biden. An NBC poll released Sunday
found that 70 percent of voters, including 51 percent of Democrats, don’t want
the president to run again — with nearly half of those people citing his age as
a major concern. In contrast, 60 percent of voters said they don’t believe
Trump should run again.
For Trump,
the moment itself is fraught and could ultimately boomerang months from now. In
the primary, he is currently ascendant. But he faces a bruising general
election against a candidate who has already beaten him. And recent surveys
have been mixed on whether Trump or Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis — who has yet to
declare his own candidacy — are more likely to beat Biden in a general election
matchup.
“DeSantis
squeaked out a tough victory in 2018 and won by 20 points in 2022,” Kochel
said. “Electability is a strong argument for Nikki Haley, Tim Scott — all of
them. Trump has extremely high negatives, and very low favorables, except
within the base of the party. Trump has the worst general election argument of
any of the candidates or potential candidates.”


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