Trump
campaign pulls away from three target states after Harris surge
Ex-president
diverts resources from states he boasted about winning while Biden was
Democratic candidate
Robert Tait
Thu 5 Sep
2024 12.49 EDT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/article/2024/sep/05/trump-swing-state-harris
Donald Trump
has quietly wound down his presidential campaign in states he was targeting
just six weeks ago amid polling evidence showing that Kamala Harris’s entry
into the presidential race has put them out of reach and narrowed his path to
the White House.
The
Republican presidential nominee’s campaign has diverted resources away from
Minnesota, Virginia and New Hampshire – states Trump was boasting he could win
while Joe Biden was the Democratic candidate – to focus instead on a small
number of battleground states.
Money is
being poured into the three “blue wall” states of Pennsylvania, Michigan and
Wisconsin, which were all carried by Biden in 2020 and are seen as vital to the
outcome of November’s election.
Special
attention is being paid to Pennsylvania, which has 19 electoral college votes,
and where a new CNN poll shows Trump and Harris tied at 47% each.
Resources
have also been transferred to southern and south-western Sun belt states –
namely North Carolina, Georgia Nevada and Arizona – where Trump previously had
healthy leads over Biden that have been whittled away since Harris replaced the
US president at the top of the Democratic ticket.
Maga Inc, a
Trump-supporting Super Pac, has recently spent $16m in adverts in North
Carolina as polls have shown Harris close to drawing even in a state the
Democrats carried just once in presidential elections since 1980.
The tactical
shift is a graphic sign of how the dynamics of the electoral contest have
shifted since the Republican national convention in July, when euphoric Trump
campaigners talked confidently of winning Minnesota, Virginia and New
Hampshire.
Democrats
have carried all three in recent presidential polls but Biden’s support showed
signs of serious erosion following June’s calamitous debate performance in
Atlanta – prompting bullish Republican forecasts that they would be “in play”
in November.
An internal
Trump campaign memo even before the debate posited ways that the former
president could carry Minnesota and Virginia – partly helped by the presence of
the independent candidate Robert F Kennedy Jr, whose campaign was initially
thought to pose a greater threat to Biden before contrary polling evidence
changed Trump’s calculus.
As optimism
surged, Trump and his running mate, JD Vance, held a rally in Minnesota shortly
after the Republican convention, while the campaign said it planned to open
eight offices in the state and build up staff.
Since then,
Harris replaced Biden and chose the Minnesota governor, Tim Walz, as her
running mate – helping her to shore up local support – while Kennedy has
suspended his campaign and endorsed Trump.
Harris’s
ascent has also infused the Democrats’ supporters with fresh enthusiasm,
leading to a surge in popularity that has propelled her into a small but
consistent national poll lead and a fundraising bonanza that saw her campaign
raise $540m in August alone.
The
predicted rash of new Trump offices and hires in Minnesota appears not to have
happened, Axios reported.
In Virginia
– the site of Vance’s first solo rally after being appointed to the ticket –
Trump has not staged a rally for six weeks and the campaign has stopped citing
memos claiming it can flip the state. Its apparent slide down the priority list
is a far cry from 28 June, when the former president staged a rally in
Chesapeake a day after his ultimately race-changing debate with Biden.
The clearest
evidence of the switch in campaign’s thinking has come in New Hampshire, which
a former Trump field worker said this week that it was no longer trying to win.
Trump has
not appeared there since winning the Republican primary in January and has not
sent a major surrogate since the spring, despite New Hampshire being identified
by Michael Whatley, chair of the Republican National Committee, after the June
debate as one of the states the Trump campaign was targeting to expand its
electoral wining map.
Recent polls
have shown Harris leading outside the margin of error.
“This
election is going to be won in those seven swing states,” Lou Gargiulo, the
co-chair of Trump’s campaign in New Hampshire, told Politico. “That’s where the
effort’s got to be put.”
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