Newly Flush With Cash, Nikki Haley Makes Her Move
in Iowa. Is It Too Late?
A super PAC backing the former governor of South
Carolina plans to knock on 100,000 doors in Iowa before the caucuses, but it’s
running out of time to spread her message.
Kellen
Browning Jazmine Ulloa
By Kellen
Browning and Jazmine Ulloa
Kellen
Browning reported from Ames and Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Jazmine Ulloa reported from
Treynor, Agency, Osceola and Davenport, Iowa.
Dec. 25,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/25/us/politics/haley-iowa-super-pac.html
Tyler
Raygor rapped on the door of a gray, one-story house in a neighborhood in
northern Ames, Iowa, and waited until a man in a hoodie and jeans appeared
before launching into his pitch.
The man,
Mike Morton, said he was leaning toward voting for Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida
or former President Donald J. Trump in next month’s caucuses. But had Mr.
Morton considered Nikki Haley, the former governor of South Carolina? No, Mr.
Morton admitted, he hadn’t given her much thought.
Mr. Raygor,
the state director for Americans for Prosperity Action, a super PAC supporting
Ms. Haley, pointed to a recent poll showing Ms. Haley with a large lead over
President Biden in a general election matchup, and highlighted her time serving
as the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. He then handed Mr. Morton a Haley
campaign flier. The pitch had an effect: Mr. Morton, 54, said he “definitely
will look closer at Haley.”
“If you
didn’t come to my house,” he added, “I probably would overlook her a little bit
more.”
With just
under a month to go before January’s caucuses, Ms. Haley’s campaign — along
with Americans for Prosperity Action — aims to capitalize on the momentum that
her presidential bid has gained in recent months by reaching persuadable voters
and firmly establishing her as the chief alternative to Mr. Trump for the
Republican nomination.
And while
her campaign’s efforts have yielded better polling results in other early
voting states, including New Hampshire and South Carolina, she now sees a
chance to secure a better-than-expected finish in Iowa.
“It’s
ground game,” she told The Des Moines Register last week. “We’re making sure
that every area is covered.”
Ms. Haley
received an 11th-hour boost last month with the endorsement of Americans for
Prosperity Action, a deep-pocketed organization founded by the billionaire
industrialist brothers Charles and David Koch. That backing unlocked access to
donors and infused her bare-bones campaign with funds for television spots and
mail advertisements. (Under federal law, Ms. Haley’s campaign and the
organization cannot coordinate, but the super PAC can support her with
advertising, messaging and voter engagement.)
In Iowa,
where Ms. Haley had ceded ground to her better-funded rivals for most of the
race, the A.F.P. Action apparatus has whirred to life, deploying its network of
volunteers and staff members like Mr. Raygor across the state to knock on doors
and change minds.
The super
PAC has enlisted about 150 volunteer and part-time staff members to canvass the
state, and it aims to knock on 100,000 doors before the caucuses, said Drew
Klein, a senior adviser with A.F.P. Action. It has spent more than $5.7 million
on pro-Haley advertisements and canvassing efforts nationwide since endorsing
her, and it had more than $74 million on hand as of July, according to the most
recent financial filings with the Federal Election Commission.
Both Ms.
Haley and Mr. DeSantis are fighting for a pool of undecided voters that could
be dwindling as Mr. Trump maintains his dominant lead. A Des Moines
Register/NBC News/Mediacom poll this month found that Mr. Trump was the top
choice for 51 percent of Republicans likely to caucus, up from 43 percent in
October.
Mr.
DeSantis’s support in the state increased slightly, to 19 percent, while Ms.
Haley’s did not change, remaining at 16 percent. Another Emerson College poll
in the state last week found Mr. Trump had support from half of Republican
caucus voters, while Ms. Haley had 17 percent and Mr. DeSantis had 15 percent.
But the
reinforcements may be too late to overtake Mr. DeSantis in the state, where he
and the groups supporting him have spent considerably more time and money.
The Florida
governor has visited all Iowa’s 99 counties, and his well-funded ground
operation, run almost entirely by Never Back Down, an affiliated super PAC, has
been active in the state for months. It says it has already knocked on more
than 801,000 doors.
Despite
recent turmoil at that group — including the departure of its top strategist,
Jeff Roe, just over a week ago — Never Back Down has established a foothold in
Iowa, with a new emphasis on its turnout operation. Mr. DeSantis also has been
endorsed by key figures there, including Kim Reynolds, the popular Republican
governor, and Bob Vander Plaats, the influential evangelical leader.
“Nikki
Haley’s 11th-hour rent-a-campaign gambit won’t work,” Andrew Romeo, a spokesman
for Mr. DeSantis, said in a statement. “Only the Washington establishment,” he
added, “would try to pitch that grass-roots success can be bought.”
Jimmy
Centers, a Republican strategist in Iowa who is unaligned in the race, said
A.F.P. Action’s endorsement, and its boots-on-the-ground operation, could be
the “missing link” for Ms. Haley. But he added that the group was up against a
ticking clock.
“The open
question here in Iowa is: Did Ambassador Haley peak about 30 days too soon,
where she is already taking arrows and A.F.P. doesn’t have time to catch up?”
Mr. Centers said.
The super
PAC argues its push is arriving at the right time because many people are just
beginning to pay attention to the race for the Republican nomination. Mr.
Raygor recalled criticism from the Trump campaign that wondered if A.F.P.
Action would knock on doors on Christmas, given its late start.
“Maybe not
on Christmas, but we’ll be knocking on the 23rd. We’ll be knocking on the
26th,” Mr. Raygor said. “My team’s knocked in negative-30-degree wind chills
before. Winter does not scare us.”
But his
recent swing through Ames illustrated the difficulty of a last-minute push. Of
the six Republican voters who spoke with Mr. Raygor, one was already a Haley
supporter and two said they were persuadable. The other three were firmly
caucusing for either Mr. Trump or Vivek Ramaswamy and could not be swayed.
“You’re not
going to get me off of Trump, ever,” said Barbara Novak, dismissing Mr.
Raygor’s best efforts as her bulldog barked at him from the window. “He did
everything he said he was going to.”
The
reaction from Wanda Bauer, 72, suggested that the attacks lobbed at Ms. Haley
by her rivals had shaped perceptions among at least some voters. Ms. Bauer said
Ms. Haley was “big government” and “pro-giving money to Ukraine.”
“Just read
the things she supports,” she said, “and you won’t be walking around passing
out her brochures afterward, I guarantee you.”
A recent
trek through a neighborhood in Cedar Rapids was even less fruitful. Cheryl
Jontz, 60, and Kyla Higgins, 18, two part-time A.F.P. Action staff members,
split up to proselytize Ms. Haley. But few people seemed interested in
answering their doors in the freezing morning temperatures, and those who did
mostly said they would be backing Mr. Trump.
Ms. Higgins
did reach one somewhat open-minded voter: Lisa Andersen, 52, who said that she
was leaning toward Mr. DeSantis or Mr. Trump, but that she would be willing to
consider Ms. Haley if the former president’s legal troubles caught up to him.
“If Trump
is in an orange jumpsuit, you have to make a different decision,” Ms. Andersen
said.
A Haley
campaign spokeswoman said that the support of A.F.P. Action had not changed the
campaign’s calculus for strategy and a ground game in Iowa, where her team has
been trying to reach all corners of the state.
In recent
days, the campaign has been gearing up for its final push before the caucuses.
Ms. Haley finished a five-day swing through the state last week and is bringing
on more staff members, including Pat Garrett, a former adviser to the Iowa
governor who will lead her Iowa press team.
David Oman,
a Republican strategist and Haley supporter, said Ms. Haley was spending time
where it most mattered: the six to eight metro areas where a majority of Iowa’s
voters live.
“They are
running a nimble campaign,” Mr. Oman said, pointing to a small group of core
staff members and an assembly of volunteers working long hours. “They are
making a fight out of it — that’s for sure.”
Kellen
Browning writes about technology, the gig economy and the video game industry.
He has been reporting for The Times since 2020. More about Kellen Browning
Jazmine
Ulloa is a national politics reporter for The Times, covering the 2024
presidential campaign. She is based in Washington. More about Jazmine
Ulloa



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