Biden aims for North Carolina as 2024 election comes into focus
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[January 18, 2024]
By Trevor Hunnicutt
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Joe Biden will fix his gaze on one
of the prizes of the 2024 election three days after Donald Trump's Iowa
Republican primary triumph, taking his economic pitch to closely
contested North Carolina on Thursday.
After Trump's 51% win in the Iowa caucus cemented his front-runner
status for Republicans, Biden heads to North Carolina, the state his
Democrats are most optimistic about converting in 2024. Trump narrowly
won the state in 2020 by 74,483 votes and 1.3 percentage points.
The trip, tied to the rollout of new funds for broadband internet, is
Biden's fourth this month to an anticipated battleground state in the
2024 presidential election.
It comes as Biden's re-election campaign, launched nearly nine months
ago, revs up into general-election mode with hires across a series of
the states where voting preferences can swing to either party.
Since 1980, North Carolina has only backed one Democrat in a
presidential election: Barack Obama in 2008. But Biden's loss there in
2020 was narrower than Obama's in 2012 and Hillary Clinton's in 2016.
The incumbent president will need liberals like those concentrated in
urban, highly educated Raleigh to turn out in high numbers to win a
state whose vast rural regions favor Trump.
The Biden campaign has brought on David Berrios, who ran its 2020 effort
in the state, along with two senior advisers, La'Tanta McCrimmon and
Scott Falmlen.
"We expect North Carolina to be extremely competitive," said Biden's
deputy principal campaign manager, Quentin Fulks. "President Biden and
Vice President Harris have a strong record on issues that resonate with
North Carolinians."
The Republican National Committee did not respond to a request for
comment.
Biden's plans to speak on $82 million in new broadband internet
development from his signature $1.9 trillion pandemic relief law, also
known as the 2021 American Rescue Plan, offers clues to how he will
approach the state's 11 million people. The administration says the
project is lowering utility bills and creating jobs making fiber-optic
cable.
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U.S. President Joe Biden makes remarks to promote his infrastructure
spending proposals during a visit to the Flatirons Campus
Laboratories and Offices of the National Renewable Energy Laboratory
(NREL), in Arvada, Colorado, U.S. September 14, 2021. REUTERS/Leah
Millis/File Photo
Biden's two prior trips to North Carolina, in 2023, also focused on
economics. The administration has struggled to get its message that
the economy is strong to stick with voters concerned about high
costs.
The campaign has as well tested messages on threats to freedom in
the state, running a television advertisement there on the third
anniversary of the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack.
Vice President Kamala Harris, more directly focused on the
Democratic Party's base among younger voters and people of color,
was in Charlotte last week to talk about gun violence and spent a
prior trip last year talking about abortion rights.
The state also plays host to a competitive governor's race in 2024.
Roy Cooper, one of the few Democrats to lead a state that Donald
Trump won in 2016 and 2020, cannot run again due to term limits.
"I've often said that Democrats don't have a messaging problem, they
have a showing up problem," said North Carolina Democratic Party
Chair Anderson Clayton.
With Biden's and Harris' visit, he said, "they're showing up and
folks are taking notice."
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Heather Timmons and Tom
Hogue)
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