Biden-Harris campaign works to court Black swing state voters, a vital bloc


Biden-Harris campaign works to court Black swing state voters, a vital bloc – CBS News

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Black voters in swing states like Wisconsin were key to President Joe Biden’s victory in 2020, but their support may be waning ahead of the 2024 election. The campaign is paying millions to court such voters.

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Biden campaign to launch ad targeting former Nikki Haley voters


President Joe Biden’s campaign, flush with cash after Thursday’s $26 million fundraiser in New York, is putting some of that advantage into a new ad that will directly aim to sway supporters of Nikki Haley to support the Democrat’s re-election.

Senior members of the Biden campaign played the planned ad during a meeting of the National Finance Committee in New York on Friday, two sources in attendance told NBC News. The Biden campaign later posted a version of it to X.

The ad features former President Donald Trump, in his own words, calling the former South Carolina governor “Birdbrain” and saying her supporters were not welcome in his campaign.

In a January post on his Truth Social website, Trump said: “Anybody that makes a ‘Contribution’ to Birdbrain, from this moment forth, will be permanently barred from the MAGA camp. We don’t want them, and will not accept them.”

Trump walked back that threat after Haley exited the race, saying in a post that he “would further like to invite all of the Haley supporters to join the greatest movement in the history of our Nation.”

The Biden campaign did not immediately respond to comment about the new ad, including how widely it would air on paid television. 

Trump never lost a Republican nominating contest this year, securing his party’s nomination for the third consecutive presidential election earlier this month to set up the longest general election campaign in the nation’s history. 

Biden advisers, though, have been closely tracking the level of support, both in earlier, contested Republican primaries and caucuses as well as those that followed Haley’s decision to end her campaign for indicators of where Democrats can potentially pick up support from independent and even Republican voters who voted against Trump.

Moderate and anti-Trump Republicans contributed to Biden’s victory in 2020. Some political observers told NBC News in March that former Haley voters could make a difference in some battleground states, including Pennsylvania, which Biden narrowly won in 2020.

“Donald Trump made it clear he doesn’t want Nikki Haley’s supporters. I want to be clear: There is a place for them in my campaign,” Biden said in a statement after the South Carolina Republican ended her bid. Biden also praised Haley for having the “courage” to challenge the former president.

The Trump campaign is pushing back on the Biden campaign’s efforts. A Trump campaign senior official said a “good chunk of the people who voted for Nikki in some states” were “Democrats.” 

“We’ve made it clear that the door is always open” to Republican Haley supporters, the official added. “We have no doubt that we’re going to get them back because they’re facing a choice between continued slide downhill from an economic standpoint, from a security standpoint, from a border security standpoint, and more of the same.”





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Black voters and organizers in battleground states say they’re anxious about enthusiasm for Biden


Earlier this week, Rev. Greg Lewis, an assistant pastor at St. Gabriel’s Church of God In Christ in Milwaukee, physically carried one of his parishioners to the polls inside the city’s Midtown early voting center to cast a ballot in Wisconsin’s upcoming Democratic primary. Supported by crutches and the pastor himself, the disabled man was one of many residents Lewis has helped vote this cycle.

Through his nonprofit, Souls to the Polls, Lewis has been coordinating multi-church early voting campaign drives after services on Sundays, encouraging more Black residents to vote.

“They are the difference makers,” Lewis said on Monday.

President Biden’s winning coalition in 2020 was led by Black voters, particularly in major cities in battleground states. But this time around, there are signs that his support among this bloc of voters has softened. A CBS News poll in late February showed 76% of likely Black voters said they backed his reelection bid, down from 87% who voted for him in 2020.

The more than a dozen Black voters and organizers interviewed by CBS News in battleground states have shared a sense of disappointment about the impending rematch of the 2020 presidential election, with worries it will translate to voters staying home in November. 

They credit Mr. Biden’s policies and legislative record, but say there have been difficulties in effectively communicating his successes to voters.

And while the president has just wrapped a post-State of the Union tour of every battleground state, they want him to appear in bigger, more accessible venues. They also want him to meet more frequently with Black groups and organizations in Black communities. 

“He’s getting there. He just needs to be in Georgia more and let the people see him get out,” said Tina Metcalf, a former educator who saw Mr. Biden speak in Atlanta recently. 

Concerns about voter apathy, messaging and representation

A voter casts a ballot at an early voting center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on Sunday, March 24, 2024.
A voter casts a ballot at an early voting center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on Sunday, March 24, 2024.

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In January, Karen Weaver, the former mayor of Flint, Michigan, attended a virtual meeting between Black women leaders and Biden campaign leadership. The women shared concerns about the Biden campaign’s representation of Black women in leadership and surrogate roles, and the effectiveness of communicating the administration’s record. 

Weaver and Holli Holliday, who is the president of the group Sisters Lead Sisters Vote and organized the meeting, said those concerns remain.

“People are saying, ‘OK, well, now, what have they done again?’ That shouldn’t be a question that people are asking. That message ought to be loud and clear,” Weaver said. 

“We need to have messengers and people affiliated with the campaign that can speak to these different audiences. And it’s going to be more than the president and vice president,” Holliday said. “Mis[information] and disinformation has continually made the electorate less trustful of elected officials.”

In response to calls for more Black women in campaign leadership, a Biden spokesperson said they have hired Black women “to lead vital programs at both the national and state level – this includes leading our national voter protection and access efforts, as well as serving as leaders in key states.”

In a focus group of voters organized by BlackPAC, a left-leaning political action committee dedicated to mobilizing Black voters, initial sentiments toward Mr. Biden were largely negative. After learning about policy changes spearheaded by the Biden administration, specifically student loan forgiveness and a cap on insulin prices, many shifted their perspective.

“We’re hearing while [Black voters] are excited about some of the policy initiatives, they haven’t felt them. That’s one of the challenges of making big, long-term policy, is it doesn’t have that immediate effect,” said Quentin James, the founder of the Collective PAC, the largest political action committee supporting Black candidates.

Battleground state party officials and organizers say highlighting the binary choice between Mr. Biden and former President Donald Trump, in addition to the White House’s record, is key to energizing voters. 

“It’s still relatively early in the campaign,” Sen. Raphael Warnock of Georgia said Sunday on “Face the Nation.” “I think that at the end of day Black voters, Georgia voters, will see that this is a binary choice. And the more Donald Trump talks, the better our fortunes will be.”

The Biden campaign’s outreach 

Following his State of the Union speech, Mr. Biden’s campaign ramped up its battleground state travel, infrastructure and outreach to key voting blocs. As part of a $30 million ad buy in March, the campaign launched multiple ads targeting Black voters in the battleground states. 

“As bad as Trump was, his economy was worse. And Black America felt it the most,” Mr. Biden says to the camera in one ad.

In August 2023, the Biden campaign announced a $25 million advertising campaign that included targeting voters through Black-owned media, such as “The Shade Room” media company.

“It’s not one of those campaigns which we feel is parachuting in at the last minute. They are coming here repeatedly and they are focused on talking to Black voters,” said Angela Lang, the founder of Black Leaders Organizing Communities in Milwaukee.

Deputy Biden campaign manager Quentin Fulks told CBS News that the campaign has made “historic investments to engage Black voters directly and reach folks where they are, earn every vote, and ensure voters are aware of how President Biden and Vice President Harris have delivered for them.”

He said the campaign saw Black communities turn out in high numbers during the primaries “because they understand the stakes of this election.”

Republicans see an opening

While Mr. Biden still captures the majority of Black voters in polling, Trump has slightly increased his support with the voting bloc.

Republicans have looked to capitalize on that opening by casting a wide net of messaging. In March, Trump’s super PAC MAGA Inc. launched radio ads targeted toward Black voters in Michigan, Georgia and Pennsylvania. The ads were focused on transgender policies and immigration. In speeches, Trump often argues the economy was better and touts Black unemployment numbers during his term.

Mikail Stewart-Saadiq, a director for the Michigan Muslim Community Council in Detroit, said he’s seen “a lot” of young Black men “drinking the MAGA juice.”

“They don’t see themselves as being full-fledged, card-carrying members of American society. Things push us to the fringes. The Republican Party, some of the MAGA rhetoric, is capitalizing on that sentiment,” said Stewart-Saadiq, who organized in 2020 for Biden’s campaign.   

Mr. Biden, his campaign and White House officials have denounced as “racist” some of Trump’s recent remarks, such as when he suggested in a February speech that Black voters can relate to his mugshot. 

Organizers said they believe the choice between the two candidates will become clearer as the campaign ramps up.

“The Trump situation is just headed downhill fast,” said Holliday, of Sisters Lead Sisters Vote. “This is a case of, we’re doing OK, and they’re doing so damn awful.”



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Republican voters express support for Trump despite legal cases


Republican voters express support for Trump despite legal cases – CBS News

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Many Republican voters in key battleground states are standing behind former President Donald Trump amid his mounting legal troubles. With the “hush money” trial set to start April 15, the presumptive GOP nominee will spend a lot of time in the courtroom ahead of November. CBS News’ Major Garrett, Fin Gómez and Katrina Kaufman join with more.

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Why some Wisconsin voters stand by Trump despite legal cases


Why some Wisconsin voters stand by Trump despite legal cases – CBS News

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Some Republican voters in Wisconsin, a battleground state in the 2024 presidential elections, are standing by former President Donald Trump through what appears to be a campaign plagued by legal woes. CBS News campaign reporter Taurean Small has been speaking to Wisconsin voters about the impact of Trump’s legal matters.

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Sen. Raphael Warnock says “Georgia voters are going to do for Joe Biden what they did for me”


Sen. Raphael Warnock says “Georgia voters are going to do for Joe Biden what they did for me” – CBS News

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Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock tells “Face the Nation” that he believes that “Georgia voters are going to do for Joe Biden what they did for me” and go blue again in 2020. “The more Donald Trump talks, the better our fortunes will be,” he said about Democrats.

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Ohio voters reject Issue 1 in major victory for abortion rights backers


Ohio voters reject Issue 1 in major victory for abortion rights backers – CBS News

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Ohio voters on Tuesday definitively rejected a closely watched proposal known as Issue 1 that would’ve made it more difficult to amend the state constitution, delivering a crucial victory to pro-abortion rights supporters ahead of a November vote on enshrining reproductive rights in the Ohio Constitution. The Associated Press projects the proposed constitutional amendment failed to garner the majority support it needed to pass.

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In a win for abortion-rights supporters, Ohio voters reject Issue 1


Groups opposing Issue 1 spent nearly $15.9 million on ads, almost all of it coming from a single group — One Person One Vote — according to the ad tracking firm AdImpact. Groups urging a “yes” vote spent a combined $10.7 million on ads.

The measure on the ballot Tuesday didn’t explicitly mention abortion, but reproductive rights groups maintained for months that it was designed to make it more difficult for voters to pass their own proposed amendment in November. 

Those groups repeatedly accused Republicans in the state of hypocrisy over their decision to schedule the August election at all.

In January, Ohio Republicans enacted a law that effectively scrubbed August special elections from the state’s calendar, with several GOP legislators calling them expensive, low-turnout endeavors that weren’t worth the trouble.

But months later, as reproductive rights groups moved closer to placing their own proposed constitutional amendment on the November ballot, state Republicans reversed themselves and scheduled the August election.

Then, in June, local news outlets published a video of Republican Secretary of State Frank LaRose — a candidate for the Senate — acknowledging that the purpose of the summertime ballot measure was “100% about keeping a radical pro-abortion amendment out of our constitution.”

Groups opposing the measure also frequently emphasized how passing it Tuesday would have marked a major change to the constitutional amendment process: State law has required only a simple majority to pass constitutional amendments since 1912. Several former Republican officeholders, including four GOP ex-governors, publicly opposed the measure.

The proposed 60% threshold would almost certainly have complicated the prospects to pass the proposed November amendment. 

Public polling has found that about 59% of Ohio voters support including abortion rights in the state constitution — just shy of the newly proposed higher threshold.

Instead, Ohio becomes the latest red state — following ones like Kentucky and Kansas — where abortion-rights advocates have won a ballot measure battle in the year since the Supreme Court’s Dobbs ruling.





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What voters think about Trump’s indictment in Jan. 6 case


What voters think about Trump’s indictment in Jan. 6 case – CBS News

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A fresh CBS News poll finds 51% of voters say former President Donald Trump planned to stay in office through illegal and unconstitutional means after the 2020 election. That’s compared to 29% who say he attempted to hold on to power legally. CBS News’ executive director of elections and surveys Anthony Salvanto breaks down what voters think about Trump’s indictment in the Jan. 6 case.

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Zimbabwe’s opposition leader tells AP intimidation is forcing voters to choose ruling party or death


HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) — Zimbabwe’s main opposition leader accused President Emmerson Mnangagwa of violating the law and tearing apart independent institutions to cling to power.

In an interview with The Associated Press, Nelson Chamisa also warned that any evidence of tampering by Mnangagwa’s ruling party in upcoming elections could lead to “total disaster” for a beleaguered nation that is in economic ruin and already under United States and European Union sanctions for its human rights record.

Chamisa, who will challenge Mnangagwa and the ruling ZANU-PF party’s 43-year hold on power in the Aug. 23 presidential, parliamentary and local government elections, claimed widespread intimidation against his opposition party ahead of the vote.

Chamisa said Mnangagwa has utilized institutions like the police and the courts to crack down on critical figures, ban opposition rallies and prevent candidates from running. In the AP interview, he laid out a series of concerns that indicate the country, with its history of violent and disputed elections, could be heading for another one.

In rural areas far from the international spotlight, many of Zimbabwe’s 15 million people are making their political choices under the threat of violence, Chamisa alleged. People are getting driven to ruling party rallies and threatened to support Mnangagwa and the Zimbabwe African National Union – Patriotic Front if they want to stay safe — or even alive.

Chamisa, who leads the Citizens Coalition for Change party, called it a choice of “death or ZANU-PF” for some.

“Mnangagwa is clearly triggering a national crisis,” he said during the interview in his 11th-floor office in Zimbabwe’s capital, Harare. “He is driving the country into chaos. He is actually instigating instability. He is violating the law. He is tearing apart institutions of the country.”

On Thursday, a man wearing the yellow colors of Chamisa’s CCC party was beaten and stoned to death on the way to a political rally, police said. The CCC accused ZANU-PF followers of killing him and attacking other opposition supporters.

Mnangagwa has repeatedly denied allegations of intimidation and violence by authorities or his party and has publicly called on his supporters to act peacefully during the campaign.

But Chamisa’s portrayal of a highly repressive political landscape in the southern African nation — where the removal of autocrat Robert Mugabe in 2017 appears to have been a false dawn — is backed by reports released by Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch ahead of the elections taking place in less than three weeks.

They will take place amid “five years of brutal crackdowns on human rights,” Amnesty said, since Mnangagwa gained power from Mugabe in a coup and then won a disputed presidential election by a razor-thin margin against Chamisa in 2018. In its assessment, Human Rights Watch said Zimbabwean authorities have “weaponized the criminal justice system against the ruling party’s opponents” and the buildup to the vote has not met free and fair international standards.

Zimbabwe has significant mineral resources — including Africa’s largest deposits of highly sought-after lithium — and rich agricultural potential, and could be of huge benefit to the continent if it gained the political and economic stability that has eluded it for years. Zimbabwe was shunned by the West for two decades because of abuses during the regime of Mugabe, who died in 2019.

Mugabe’s removal sent Zimbabweans into the streets to celebrate, and Mnangagwa promised democracy and freedom would be born from the coup. He maintained recently that “Zimbabwe is now a mature democracy” under him.

Rights groups say it’s a mirage and the 80-year-old Mnangagwa, a former Mugabe ally once known as his enforcer, has been as repressive as the man he removed.

Under Mnangagwa, critics and opposition figures have been jailed, including CCC lawmaker Job Sikhala, who has been in detention for over a year after accusing ruling party supporters of hacking to death an opposition activist. Some have faced legal backlash for seemingly minor criticisms, like world-renowned author Tsitsi Dangarembga, who was arrested for participating in a protest that called for better services for citizens.

A court decision disqualified all 12 CCC candidates in Bulawayo, the second-largest city, from standing in the election, even after the electoral agency said they had registered properly. They successfully appealed to the Supreme Court to be allowed to stand.

“I am nowhere near the court,” Mnangagwa said, denying any influence on the initial decision to bar the opposition candidates.

Chamisa, a 45-year-old lawyer and pastor, said Mnangagwa was now overseeing a second coup in Zimbabwe.

“You can’t have a contest without contestation. You can’t have an election without candidates,” Chamisa said. “Once you eliminate candidates, you are actually eliminating an election. And that’s the point we are making. … It’s a coup on choices.”

The elections will be monitored by observers from the European Union and African Union, who were invited by Mnangagwa. He says he has nothing to hide. Human Rights Watch has questioned if the observers will be allowed to access all parts of the country, while their small numbers make it likely they won’t be able to monitor the entire vote. There are 150 observers from the EU and more than 12,500 polling stations across the country.

Chamisa told the AP that his party has put in place systems to be able to independently check vote counts, but there are also doubts that the CCC can deploy enough members to watch over those stations, many deep in rural areas regarded as ZANU-PF strongholds.

Should their calculations show fraud this time, as was alleged in 2018 and other elections before that, Chamisa warned it will “plunge the country into total disaster and chaos.”

He urged Mnangagwa to step back from his repressive policies in a country denied democracy under white minority rule before 1980 and again — according to international rights groups — under the only two leaders it has seen since: Mugabe and Mnangagwa.

“He must be stopped because he can’t drive the whole nation and plunge it into darkness and an abyss on account of just wanting to retain power,” Chamisa said of Mnangagwa. “Zimbabweans deserve peace, they deserve rest. They have suffered for a long time.”

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AP Africa news: https://apnews.com/hub/africa



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