Biden, Trump launch fight for top election prize: Georgia
Send a link to a friend
[March 09, 2024]
By James Oliphant and Nandita Bose
(Reuters) - President Joe Biden and Republican presidential candidate
Donald Trump will campaign in the critical battleground state of Georgia
on Saturday in what essentially will be the first face-off of the 2024
general election.
Both candidates have been accusing each other of being a threat to
democracy for weeks, but Saturday will mark the first time this year
both will be in the same battleground state at the same time.
There may not be a more hotly contested state than Georgia in the Nov. 5
general election, which swung to Biden in 2020 election and was central
to Trump’s false claims that he was the victim of widespread election
fraud. He faces criminal charges in the state over his attempts to
interfere with the vote count there.
Trump is expected to clinch his party's nomination on Tuesday, when
Georgia, along with Hawaii, Mississippi and Washington state hold
nominating contests.
On Thursday, Biden delivered a State of the Union speech laden with
criticisms of Trump, accusing him of threatening democracy, kowtowing to
Russia and sinking bipartisan immigration reform.
The president, however, continues to grapple with a backlash among
Democrats for his staunch support of Israel in its war against Hamas in
Gaza, discontent that could manifest itself in the vote in Georgia on
Tuesday.
A coalition of multifaith and multiracial groups in Georgia have
launched a campaign urging voters to leave their ballots blank instead
of voting for Biden on Tuesday in the hope of sending a message to the
White House to reconsider its support of Israel.
In battleground Michigan's primary in February, more than 100,000 people
voted "uncommitted" rather than support Biden in protest over Gaza and a
similar proportion of voters made the same choice in last Tuesday's
Minnesota primary. Those actions amplified concern among Democrats that
some voters could chose to stay home in November.
“Biden cannot win (Georgia) again if young voters, Black voters, Muslim
voters, the Arab American voters, the Jewish voters and others who
supported him last time decide to stay home or decide to vote for a
third party candidate,” said Edward Ahmed Mitchell, spokesperson for the
Listen to Georgia Coalition.
Mitchell said the goal for the effort would be to approach the margin -
about 11,000 votes - by which Biden won the state in order to convey the
risk that they believe the president is taking on the Gaza war.
[to top of second column]
|
Republican presidential candidate and former U.S. President Donald
Trump speaks on stage during a campaign rally tonight in Richmond,
Virginia, U.S. March 2, 2024. REUTERS/Jay Paul/File Photo
COLLISION COURSE
Trump will hold a rally on Saturday evening in Rome, Georgia, a
conservative bastion in the state that lies within the district of
U.S. Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, an outspoken ally who
attended the State of the Union address clad in Trump gear.
Biden will then hold an evening event in the Atlanta area. The
city's suburbs, which are growing and rapidly diversifying, are
viewed as the key to Democratic hopes in the state.
Senior Democrats and Biden campaign officials worry that the
hard-won 2020 state is at risk of slipping from their grasp in 2024,
as Black voter discontent threatens to suppress turnout. Biden edged
out Trump in Georgia by just 0.23% in 2020.
Georgia Governor Brian Kemp and the state's top election official,
Brad Raffensperger, were adamant that no widespread fraud occurred
and that the vote count was legitimate despite Trump's insistence
otherwise.
In Georgia, prosecutors allege Trump and his allies engaged in a
conspiracy by making false statements about the election and
developing a plan to disrupt and delay the congressional
certification of the electoral votes. Trump denies the charges.
Trump and his co-defendants are attempting to disqualify Fulton
County District Attorney Fani Willis from the case, alleging she was
involved in an “improper relationship” with a special prosecutor she
named to the case and that she financially benefited from the
relationship. Willis has denied the allegations.
Last month, a Fulton County judge heard arguments on Trump’s request
and is expected to issue a ruling within days.
Prosecutors have pushed for starting the Trump trial in Georgia as
early as August when Trump would be in the heat of the campaign. But
it remains unclear whether it will go forward before the election.
(Reporting by James Oliphant and Nandita Bose; Additional reporting
by Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Jonathan Oatis)
[© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved.]This material
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|