How the Harris surge scrambled Trump's battle plan
Trump gestures as he speaks during a campaign rally in Atlanta, Georgia, August 3, 2024. REUTERS/Umit Bektas
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A little over two weeks
ago, Donald Trump's presidential campaign had visions of an expansive
national strategy that would result in a landslide victory in November.
Now, as they struggle to blunt
a surging Kamala Harris, who swiftly replaced President Joe
Biden as the Democratic Party's presidential candidate last month,
campaign advisers say they are recalibrating to protect states once thought of
as safe and narrowing ambitions for the electoral map.
While top Trump advisers once
saw a chance for an electoral blowout - with Democratic-leaning states like
Minnesota and Virginia in play - the elevation of Harris has prompted
Republicans to refocus on a narrower path to victory that runs through
traditional battleground states like Pennsylvania and Georgia.
"The race has
changed," Corey Lewandowski, a longtime adviser to the former president,
told Reuters, though he said the race still favors Trump. "There's a lot
of us that wanted to very actively run against Joe Biden. We felt very good
about our race."
Publicly, Trump and his allies
have tried vigorously to cast Harris, a Californian, as an out-of-touch liberal
and link her to unpopular Biden policies on immigration and
inflation. They say it matters little whether they are facing Biden or Harris.
Internally, nine sources told
Reuters they see Harris as a far tougher opponent than Biden, who had been
struggling for months in the face of doubts about his mental acuity and
weakening poll numbers.
"It doesn't change the
map as much as shrink it. Now there's no reason to talk about places like New
Jersey anymore," said a member of the Trump campaign, who spoke on
condition of anonymity to discuss internal campaign matters.
Reuters interviewed 12
campaign staff, advisers and donors who described a campaign that is grasping
for a fresh strategy as it confronts a younger, more dynamic Democratic
candidate who has energized the Democratic base and raised hundreds of millions
of dollars in a matter of days.
"It's clear to everyone
she could win," said one senior Trump adviser, who spoke on the condition
of anonymity to more freely discuss internal deliberations.
When asked about the prospects
of a shrinking battleground map, the Trump team said its strategy hadn't
changed since Harris became the Democratic candidate.
"Team Trump has ads in
every battleground state, we have expanded the political map to include
traditional 'blue states' like Minnesota and Virginia with staff on the ground,"
Republican Party spokesperson Anna Kelly said.
Ammar Moussa, a Harris
campaign spokesman, said Trump and Vance were taking the country backwards,
while Harris was taking the country forwards. He did not address the electoral
map.
The Trump sources Reuters
spoke to pointed to three issues: delays in rolling out attack ads against
Harris, which are seen as key for pointing out an opponent's perceived
weaknesses; doubts among some Republican leaders and donors over the selection
of Senator JD Vance as running mate; and concerns over Trump himself as he
tramples over his advisers' efforts to define Harris based on her policy
positions.
One source said the
anti-Harris ads had been slow to air in part because the material had to be run
by focus groups first.
The campaign also wanted to
see who Harris would pick as her running mate, according to the source briefed
on the plans.
Harris this week announced
Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, a plain-speaking midwesterner, as her vice
presidential candidate.
By late May, the Trump
campaign had started gaming out the possibility that Harris or another Democrat
could replace Biden at the top of the ticket, according to an internal memo
from campaign staffer Austin McCubbin shared with senior advisers.
The 12-page memo, which was
reviewed by Reuters, outlined the Democratic Party's rules for replacing a
presidential candidate and possible scenarios, including Biden stepping down
voluntarily and an "insider rebellion."
The memo did not detail how to
respond to a Harris candidacy.
Tony Fabrizio, a Trump
campaign pollster, predicted in a memo released to the press last month that
Harris would enjoy a short-term polling boost, but that the race would then
settle down. "Harris' 'honeymoon' will end and voters will refocus on her
role as Biden's partner and co-pilot," he wrote in the memo.
In the lead-up to Biden's
exit, the Trump-aligned MAGA Inc super PAC readied a TV ad accusing Harris of
covering up Biden's infirmity. It began airing in four swing states on July 21,
the day Biden announced that he was ending his reelection campaign.
At the same time, the campaign
found itself on the defensive over Trump's selection of Vance as his running
mate.
Vance has faced a wave of
negative press over past comments referring to some Democrats, including
Harris, as "a bunch of childless cat ladies," an insult seen as
misogynistic and dismissive of people without children.
The Republican National
Committee and the campaign have been fielding calls from some donors who fear
Vance has become a distraction and is dragging the ticket down, according to
two sources aware of the calls.
As the campaign focuses on a
smaller map, Vance is expected to spend more time in relatively conservative
and rural places, particularly in Rust Belt states, like Michigan and
Pennsylvania, where his rural roots and concerns about industrial decay are
more likely to resonate with voters, according to four sources close to the
campaign or vice presidential candidate.
This week, Vance has held
press conferences near Harris-Walz campaign events in Wisconsin and
Michigan.
And then there is Trump's
resort to name-calling instead of focusing on Harris' policy positions. Trump
has cycled furiously through a series of personal insults against Harris. Those
efforts have generated negative headlines - about Trump, rather than Harris.
At an event for the National
Association of Black Journalists last week, Trump questioned whether
Harris - whose mother was born in India and whose father was born in
Jamaica - was actually Black.
That left donors and aides
baffled and alarmed, according to a Republican donor, an operative at a
pro-Trump super PAC spending group, and a Trump-supporting union leader.
Three days later, Trump
attacked Georgia's Republican governor, Brian Kemp, at a rally, possibly
alienating a popular figure in a battleground state where Trump could need help
mobilizing voters to the polls.
Trump has also been firing off
multiple, convoluted missives on his Truth Social app, including one on Tuesday
in which he mused about Biden returning to the top of the ticket.
In the spring and earlier this
summer, as public opinion polls showed Trump expanding his lead over Biden in
battleground states, the former president did events in what had been
considered safe Democratic areas – Minnesota, Virginia, even New York City – in
a bid to expand the electoral map.
By last Saturday, Trump was
back to basics: campaigning in Georgia, where polls showed the race had
tightened after Harris' entry.
The state is going to be
fiercely competitive, with Trump clinging to a slight edge thanks to support
from some Black voters, said Mark Rountree, a Georgia pollster who is not
affiliated with either campaign.
And Trump is getting outspent
on campaign ads in battleground states, according to AdImpact, a firm that
tracks campaign ad spending.
Harris and affiliated
committees have outspent Trump and his allies $112 million to $70.1 million on
ads since July 22, according to AdImpact data, although Trump has matched
Harris' outlays in Pennsylvania, perhaps the most crucial state for each side.
In terms of future
reservations of TV air time, Harris and her allies are swamping Trump $172.4
million to $71.8 million as of this week, the firm said, although those figures
are likely to change in the coming weeks.
Perhaps most telling was the
Trump campaign's significant new ad buy in North Carolina, which had looked
likely to remain Republican until Harris' ascension energized Black and young
voters.
"They're putting money in
there now in the hope she decides to leave it alone," said Justin Sayfie,
a Republican lobbyist and Trump fundraiser.
However, the Harris campaign
is already up on the air in the state.


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