Trump and Biden shift focus to general election rematch as Haley fights
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[January 25, 2024]
By Nathan Layne, Gram Slattery and James Oliphant
MANCHESTER, New Hampshire (Reuters) - Donald Trump and Joe Biden
attacked each other on Wednesday as they prepared for a likely election
rematch in November after Trump's win in New Hampshire's Republican
presidential primary made his White House nomination increasingly
likely, although his last remaining rival Nikki Haley vowed to stay in
the race.
Former Republican President Trump's back-to-back wins in nominating
contests put him on an almost certain path toward a general election
contest with Democratic President Biden. Both turned their fire on each
other after Trump's New Hampshire victory over Haley on Tuesday night.
Biden's reelection campaign issued a statement saying it is “now clear
that Donald Trump will be the Republican nominee,” and repeated warnings
that the former president is a threat to democracy.
Trump took to his social media platform Truth Social to repeat unfounded
allegations that Biden and his Justice Department were engaged in
political persecution, following the multiple criminal indictments of
Trump last year.
But Haley, who served as Trump's U.N. ambassador and is now his sole
opponent for the Republican nomination, pledged to take that race to
South Carolina, which votes on Feb. 24, and beyond.
In a speech to supporters in South Carolina on Wednesday night, Haley
said U.S. voters deserved a better option than a Biden-Trump rematch,
"and we're going to give it to them."
She also repeated her challenge to Trump to debate her. "Bring it
Donald, show me what you got!" she declared to cheers.
The Republican nominating race has months to go, but Trump is seeking to
knock Haley out and become the presumptive nominee quickly.
After Haley spoke, Trump warned her donors to stop funding her campaign.
On Truth Social, he said anybody making a contribution to Haley would be
"permanently barred" from his political orbit.
In South Carolina, Trump, 77, will be looking to embarrass Haley, 52, by
defeating her in her home state. Haley is aiming for an upset delivered
by voters who twice elected her as governor.
Haley has three rallies scheduled in South Carolina in the coming days,
and her campaign released two new ads as part of a $4 million ad buy in
the state.
One attacks Biden, 81, as "too old" and Trump as "too much chaos," and
calls a reprisal of the 2020 election a "rematch no one wants." The
other says she delivered "thousands of jobs, lower taxes, tough
immigration laws" as governor from 2011 to 2017.
Republicans have largely coalesced around Trump, however, putting
pressure on Haley to drop out. Trump has racked up endorsements from
most of South Carolina's leading Republican figures. Opinion polls show
him with a wide lead there.
HARD PRESS
Over the last several weeks, South Carolina U.S. Representative Joe
Wilson, South Carolina Governor Henry McMaster and South Carolina
Speaker of the House Burrell Smith have been calling state legislators
and other local officials to push them to endorse Trump, according to
two people with knowledge of the calls.
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Republican presidential candidate and former U.S. President Donald
Trump speaks during his New Hampshire presidential primary election
night watch party, in Nashua, New Hampshire, U.S., January 23, 2024.
REUTERS/Mike Segar
Trump senior adviser Jason Miller touted a new website focused on
attacking Haley, , which criticizes her for her plan to scale back
Social Security entitlements to keep the program solvent and for
proposing a gasoline tax hike when she was governor.
Ford O'Connell, a Republican consultant based in Florida and a
former Trump surrogate, said he expected the Trump campaign to pull
out all the stops now against Haley.
"The plan in South Carolina is to embarrass Nikki Haley. The key is
to make sure that the donors don’t fund her any further," O'Connell
said.
Joel Tenney, a Christian evangelist who was part of Trump's faith
coalition in Iowa, said he planned to travel to South Carolina next
week as a volunteer to help target the state's large base of
evangelical voters.
Trump has remained popular with that voting bloc, winning a
majority of white evangelicals as part of his commanding victory in
Iowa earlier this month.
Haley has said she has a better chance of beating Biden than Trump,
who faces multiple criminal charges, including for his efforts to
overturn his 2020 election loss.
Biden, who won the Democratic primary in New Hampshire after voters
wrote his name in on the ballot, was endorsed by the United Auto
Workers on Wednesday.
"Instead of talking trash about our union, Joe Biden stood with
us," UAW President Shawn Fain said in a fiery speech that referred
to Trump as a "scab."
Trump is the first Republican to sweep competitive votes in both
Iowa and New Hampshire since 1976, when the two states cemented
their status as the first nominating contests.
Tuesday's vote was the first one-on-one matchup between Trump and
Haley, after Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, once seen as Trump's
most formidable challenger, dropped out on Sunday and endorsed the
former president.
Haley, who placed third in Iowa and lost to Trump by 11 percentage
points in New Hampshire, refused to bow out.
"This race is far from over," Haley told supporters at a
post-election party in Concord, challenging Trump to debate her.
At his own party in Nashua, Trump opened his speech by mocking
Haley, calling her an "imposter" and saying: "She's doing, like, a
speech like she won. She didn't win. She lost. She had a very bad
night."
(Reporting by Gram Slattery, James Oliphant and Nathan Layne;
Additional reporting by Kanishka Singh, Costas Pitas, Alexandra
Ulmer, Susan Heavey, Doina Chiacu, and Helen Coster; Writing by
Joseph Ax, Jeff Mason and Tim Reid; Editing by Michael Perry,
Colleen Jenkins, Daniel Wallis, Caitlin Webber, Diane Craft and
Michael Perry)
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