Under pressure, Biden camp charts narrowing path to reelection
Send a link to a friend
[July 18, 2024]
By Nandita Bose, Jarrett Renshaw and Stephanie Kelly
LAS VEGAS/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Joe Biden's campaign is
pursuing a razor-thin path to reelection against his Republican opponent
Donald Trump in November, senior Democratic officials say, with four of
the seven key battleground states now looking increasingly out of reach.
Georgia, Arizona and Nevada — all claimed by Biden in 2020 - in addition
to North Carolina which Democrats had hoped at one point to take back
from Trump have grown more challenging, more than a dozen campaign
officials and senior Democrats in battleground states told Reuters in
interviews.
Trump, 78, had been leading the polls in all four states well before he
was grazed by a bullet last weekend, a position that consolidated after
Biden's disastrous debate performance on June 27.
Calculations can change before election day. But the campaign officials'
latest assessment allows for almost no margin of error. Biden, 81, can
only cobble together the 270 Electoral College votes needed to clinch
the presidency if he wins the Rust Belt manufacturing states of
Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Michigan and a congressional district in
Nebraska that could also soon be at risk.
"It's looking very tight" in Arizona, Georgia and Nevada, a senior
campaign official told Reuters. "Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin is
the clearest path to 270. That is what we're focusing on."
However, Dan Kanninen, the director for battleground states, said the
campaign was adding staff in Arizona and Nevada and that being "highly
competitive" in all of the swing states remained a priority. "I do not
see the map narrowing for us," he said in an interview.
Biden was on the second day of a two-day trip to Nevada on Wednesday,
when the White House announced he had a mild case of COVID and had
canceled a planned speech.
Democratic lawmakers have voiced fears that Biden would lose not only
the White House but also the House of Representatives and Senate to the
Republican party.
The campaign had hoped those voices would quiet after the shooting. But
U.S. Representative Adam Schiff, a California Democrat who is running
for the Senate, warned donors in a private meeting Tuesday that the
party was likely to suffer major losses if Biden continued to run.
Trump's immediate, televised reaction to the shooting — a raised fist as
blood streamed down his face from a grazed ear — contrasted with
questions over Biden's mental acuity and whether he has the stamina for
four more years in the White House.
Although most polls show Biden lagging Trump in the Rust Belt states the
campaign is focused on, the Democratic candidate remains "within the
margin of error," the senior official noted.
"This is the strongest path, one we're focused on right now," the
official added.
The narrowing map for Biden means a widening one for Trump. Some polls
before the shooting showed Trump competitive in Democratic-leaning
Virginia, New Hampshire and even Minnesota, which hasn't supported a
Republican presidential candidate since 1972.
"When things go south, they go south everywhere," James Carville, a
veteran Democratic strategist, said. "This has been the worst summer for
a national party since Republicans and Watergate," he added, referring
to the Congressional investigation that resulted in Republican President
Richard Nixon's resignation in 1974.
'BEST CASE' COULD JUST EKE OUT A WIN
Biden beat Trump in 2020 in the popular vote by seven million votes and
racked up 306 votes in the electoral college to Trump's 232, with
support from suburbs and the well-to-do in the Rust Belt states and the
Sun Belt of Arizona and Nevada, as well as a rush of young voters after
a summer of protests for racial justice and civil rights.
Since the November 2020 election, Biden pumped federal money into
infrastructure and manufacturing, while overseeing a post-COVID economy
that grew faster than other nations, but hit inflation highs. His
support for Israel's assault on Gaza after the attacks by Hamas, which
have killed over 37,000 Palestinians, has splintered the coalition that
elected him.
[to top of second column]
|
U.S. President Joe Biden speaks at the 115th NAACP National
Convention in Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S., July 16, 2024. REUTERS/Tom
Brenner/File Photo
Battleground state polls have favored Trump for months, and
particularly since the debate in which Biden stumbled and struggled
to complete sentences, while Trump repeated a series of well-worn
falsehoods. None have been published since the shooting, but the
assassination attempt has increased enthusiasm for Trump among his
fans, which could boost Republican turnout.
Biden "would have to draw an inside straight without missing a
single potential electoral vote in order to just scrape over the
finish line of 270," said Republican pollster Whit Ayres, referring
to a tough poker hand.
U.S. presidential elections in recent years have been decided by a
narrow slice of voters in a handful of states, but the new map for
Biden - if successful - would eke out a victory with just 270
electoral college votes to Trump's 268, the narrowest victory since
Republican Rutherford B. Hayes won by one electoral college vote in
1876.
Nebraska is one of two states which splits their electoral college
votes. (Maine is the other).
Biden won the congressional district which includes Omaha in 2020,
but Republicans, who are in control of the state, are expected to
hold a special session later this month to make Nebraska a
winner-take-all election. That would block Biden from a single,
clinching electoral vote - and could create an unprecedented 269-269
tie vote.
'POLL-ERCOASTER'
While some Democrats see a narrower map, many strategists and state
party officials say they remain optimistic about wider wins against
Trump.
Since 2020, they point out, Trump and his allies sued unsuccessfully
to overturn the election results; his followers attacked the U.S.
Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021; a jury found him guilty of sexual abuse and
he was convicted of multiple felonies over hush payment to a porn
star.
"They're not any independent Democratic voters who looked at Donald
Trump get shot in the ear and say, 'Oh my god, I gotta vote for this
guy,'" said Bakari Sellers, a Democratic political analyst. "There's
no such thing as a sympathy vote in the United States of America."
The campaign is spending $50 million on paid media in battleground
states in July, and by the end of the summer those states will have
more than 2,000 staffers, officials said.
Democrats had hoped earlier this year that the party could flip
North Carolina, which has backed only one Democrat for president
since 1976. Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris have visited
multiple times, the campaign spent millions on hiring and
advertising, and Anderson Clayton, the 26-year-old Democratic party
chair there, has spent the year knocking on doors.
The campaign isn't counting the state out, Clayton said.
"I don't ride a 'poll-ercoaster', and I think that, you know, the
investments on the ground would say that North Carolina is being
prioritized just as much as we need it to be this year in order to,
I think, put it on the map."
She added: "I feel like sometimes people that are so engaged in the
bubble oftentimes forget to touch grass every once in a while."
(Reporting by Nandita Bose in Las Vegas, Jarrett Renshaw in
Pennsylvania, and Stephanie Kelly in New York. Additional reporting
by Steve Holland in Washington and Bianca Flowers in Chicago;
Editing by Heather Timmons and Suzanne Goldenberg)
[© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]This material
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|