Discontent over immigration and the economy fuel Trump's Super Tuesday
romp
Send a link to a friend
[March 06, 2024]
By James Oliphant and Helen Coster
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Donald Trump is sailing into battle against
President Joe Biden powered by anger over the two policy issues that
have driven his comeback campaign so far: immigration and the economy.
Trump came close to sweeping the board in the 16 "Super Tuesday"
Republican primary races, putting him on the verge of clinching the
party's nomination and allowing him to train his full fire on Biden
ahead of the November election.
Trump has tapped into a current of dissatisfaction about the state of
the country that he has amplified at every opportunity. It is one that
could tip the scales in the rematch with Biden, who beat him in 2020.
Republican voters who went to the polls on Tuesday exhibited a deep
pessimism about the economy that extends beyond Trump’s loyal base of
supporters to many moderate and swing voters that could help determine
the election, according to exit polls conducted by Edison Research.
Voters also said they are increasingly alarmed by the situation at the
U.S. border with Mexico, with many calling it their top voting issue
even while living hundreds or even thousands of miles away.
“There is widespread dissatisfaction with Biden and the way things are
going in the county today,” said Mark Baldassare, statewide survey
director at the nonpartisan Public Policy Institute of California. “The
focus on immigration and economy is what caught my attention the most.”
In early 2023, Trump appeared to be in serious danger of losing the
Republican primary race, but he has since swept away all of his party
rivals. Only Nikki Haley was still barely clinging on in the party's
race for Super Tuesday and Trump is now set to seal the nomination in
upcoming votes over the next two weeks.
Still, Biden had a good day, too. He racked up hundreds of delegates as
he cruises toward the Democratic nomination and he can take heart in
Trump continuing to show weakness with some key voting segments,
including college-educated voters and moderates that both sides may need
to win.
By virtually wrapping up his party’s nomination in early March, far
ahead of when he did it for the first time in 2016, Trump has eight
months to engage directly with Biden.
He has also seen a spate of relatively positive news on the legal front.
It now appears more and more likely that the criminal trials he faces
over his role in subverting the 2020 election could be delayed until
after the election.
The most recent Reuters/Ipsos public opinion poll showed Trump and Biden
essentially tied at 36% support with the rest of poll respondents saying
they were not sure or would vote for someone else or no one at all.
The economy has long been a sore spot for Biden. Thirty-nine percent of
Reuters/Ipsos poll respondents said Trump had a better approach to the
economy during his 2017-2021 term as president, compared to 33% who said
Biden has been better.
MONEY IN MIND
Despite the Biden White House’s efforts to reassure Americans that the
economy is healthy with unemployment low, the stock market roaring and
inflation moderating, there are large swaths of voters who remain
unconvinced.
[to top of second column]
|
Donald Trump speaks at a watch party event to mark the Super Tuesday
primary elections at his Mar-a-Lago property. REUTERS/Marco Bello
According to Edison’s exit polls, the electorate that came out to
vote in the Virginia Republican primary on Tuesday broke down as 60%
self-identified Republicans and 30% independents, along with 10%
Democrats who largely crossed over to vote for Trump’s rival, Nikki
Haley.
When those voters were asked about the state of the economy, far
more than just Trump’s voters – 78% - said it was “not so good or
poor.” At the same time though, 59% said their own family was
“holding steady” financially.
That disconnect suggests voters have a more pessimistic reading on
the economy beyond their own situation, said Ron Bonjean, a veteran
Republican strategist in Washington.
“They think everyone else is doing more poorly than they are, which
lends to their viewpoint of overall economy as not so good or poor,”
he said.
In North Carolina, where independents made up about one third of the
electorate, 81% of all respondents said the economy was in bad
shape. Even more striking, 86% said they were “dissatisfied” or
“angry” with the state of the country.
BORDER TALK
Voters in both Virginia and North Carolina said immigration was
their number-one issue, followed by the economy. In North Carolina,
of the 63% of voters who said they believe migrants should be
deported to their home country, 88% went for Trump.
At a Super Tuesday event at his Mar-a-Lago home, Trump talked at
length about the situation at the U.S. southern border, which both
he and Biden visited last week in separate trips.
“Things that are happening now that are unthinkable. And they are
unthinkable at the border,” Trump said. “There are millions of
people invading our country. This is an invasion.”
The economy slightly eclipsed immigration as the top issue in
California, where Edison also polled.
While the primary was open only to registered Republicans, about 30%
of those who voted considered themselves “moderate or liberal” and
one-third labeled themselves independents. Of all voters, 83% said
the economy was “not so good” or “poor” and just 6% said they were
satisfied with the state of the country.
Trump also crushed Haley among nonwhite voters in California,
72%-23%, particularly among Latinos without college degrees. That is
a potential warning sign for Biden and a Democratic Party that
relies on such voters as a core constituency.
(Reporting by James Oliphant in Washington, Helen Coster in New York
and Nathan Layne in Palm Beach, Florida; Editing by Kieran Murray
and Alistair Bell)
[© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved.]This material
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|