Trump steps up attacks on Haley, courts her donors ahead of New
Hampshire contest
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[January 19, 2024]
By Alexandra Ulmer, Helen Coster and James Oliphant
CONCORD, New Hampshire (Reuters) - Donald Trump and his allies are going
all out to deal Republican rival Nikki Haley a back-breaking blow in
next week’s New Hampshire primary, courting her donors, bashing her in
TV ads and using racial-themed dog whistles that mock her heritage.
The multi-pronged effort is a sure sign that Trump’s presidential
election campaign views Haley as a threat they must neutralize quickly.
Trump associates have been reaching out to Haley’s top contributors,
telling them the race for the Republican nomination is essentially over
and suggesting it is time to come into the fold.
"I get calls all the time," said Fred Zeidman, a longtime Haley
fundraiser from Texas who said Trump’s allies tell him: "'We're going to
win. You’re going to lose. Don’t you want to be on the right team?'"
Zeidman said his response is that Haley can win. "Why would I get out
now?" he said. "She's doing everything she needs to do."
The fast winnowing of the Republican field has left New Hampshire as
basically a two-candidate race between Trump, the former president, and
Haley, who once served as his ambassador to the United Nations.
Polls show the New Hampshire primary on Jan. 23 to be competitive,
largely because Haley draws support from establishment Republicans,
moderates, suburbanites and independents, who are permitted to vote in
the primary. Trump continues to dominate among hard-core conservatives
and working-class voters.
Trump's campaign did not respond to inquiries about strategy, but it
appears clear the goal is to ensure Haley leaves New Hampshire with
little momentum as the fight turns next month to South Carolina, where
she served two terms as governor.
Andy Sabin, a metals magnate and Haley backer, said he, too, has been
contacted by Trump’s allies but isn't ready to jump.
"I don't know in my heart if I can give (Trump) financial support. I
just have to be in the mood. And I'm not,” Sabin said. "I can’t like him
as a person. I can't find him likeable. But I do find he was a good
president."
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Trump and his forces have stepped up attacks on Haley at campaign events
and on television.
At a rally in Atkinson, New Hampshire this week, Trump called Haley a
“disaster” and belittled her foreign policy credentials.
“She was not a good negotiator,” he said. “She likes to talk about how
(she) negotiated with China. I negotiated with China.”
Trump’s campaign is now deploying former presidential candidate Vivek
Ramaswamy, who was sharply critical of Haley in debates, to continue his
attacks against her at Trump events.
In a campaign memo earlier this month, Trump’s campaign managers Chris
LaCivita and Susie Wiles slammed Haley as a phony Republican who would
be forced to cobble together a coalition of “non-Republicans and
Democrats” to compete.
Between December and January, spending by a top Trump super PAC, MAGA
Inc., on negative Haley TV ads jumped from almost $1.6 million to
roughly $2.8 million, for a total of almost $4.4 million over the two
months, according to data from AdImpact.
One MAGA Inc. ad accuses Haley of being soft on border security, saying
she opposed the building of a wall along the U.S. border with Mexico.
The Trump campaign is running TV ads telling voters that Haley seeks to
cut Medicare and Social Security benefits, an attack typically used by
Democratic candidates against Republicans.
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Republican presidential candidate and former U.S. Ambassador to the
United Nations Nikki Haley speaks at a campaign stop ahead of the
New Hampshire primary election in Hollis, New Hampshire, U.S.,
January 18, 2024. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
At a rally on Wednesday in Rochester, New Hampshire, Haley made a
point of saying such attacks were false. She said she would seek to
reform the benefit programs. She defended her immigration record,
contending she has always supported the wall.
"Just because you see a commercial...it's not true. I know Trump
threw a temper tantrum about me last night, and I have seen the
commercials you've seen," she said at the rally. "I will always tell
you the truth."
NAME CALLING
Trump has also begun to mock Haley’s background in the same way he
has done with other women politicians of color such as Vice
President Kamala Harris.
In a Truth Social post attacking Haley on Tuesday, Trump referred to
her as “Nimrada” – a misspelling of her given first name, Nimarata,
saying she had given a “wacked out” speech in Iowa, where she came
in a distant third this week behind Trump.
Haley, the daughter of two immigrants from India, was born Nimarata
Nikki Randhawa and later took her husband’s surname. She has long
used her middle name Nikki.
As of Thursday, Trump's post had received more than 17,000 likes and
been “re-truthed” over 4,000 times.
A Reuters review of references to “Nimarata” and variations of the
name's spelling on social media platforms shows that the name has
been appearing in critical Haley posts since November.
Reuters saw an uptick in those references in December, after Haley
failed to mention slavery in her response to a New Hampshire town
hall question about the reason for the Civil War – comments she
subsequently walked back.
Since Trump’s commanding win in the Iowa caucuses, another dynamic
has emerged: Donors who want to get in Trump’s good graces as he
heads toward capturing the nomination to take on Democratic
President Joe Biden in the November general election.
Trump fundraiser Ed McMullen, a former ambassador to Switzerland,
said DeSantis and Haley donors were now reaching out to him.
He said more than 50 donors had called him in the last week wanting
to join Trump, with about 60% of them formerly with DeSantis and 30%
with Haley.
"Iowa is the catalyzing event that awakened people that it’s time to
get on board," McMullen said.
Another Republican donor, who asked to remain unidentified, said
that after Trump's Iowa victory, he has been asked to come to a
face-to-face meeting with Trump at his Florida estate.
"Since Iowa, the calls have ramped up," the donor said. "They say:
'Come down to Mar-a-Lago, let us give you 15 minutes with Trump.
Let's put all this behind us and let’s focus on beating Biden.'"
The donor said he was turning down the requests for now, but added:
"I'll be wearing a MAGA hat by summer."
(Reporting by Alexandra Ulmer in San Francisco and Helen Coster in
New York; Additional reporting and writing by James Oliphant in
Concord, New Hampshire; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Alistair
Bell)
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