New Hampshire primary voters wrestle with Haley admonition to ‘correct’ Iowa

HAMPTON, New Hampshire — Granite State officials are very proud of holding the first-in-the-nation primary — and aren’t shy about throwing shade at the other leadoff state in the nominating process.

“With all due respect to Iowa, thanks for playing but give me a break,” GOP Gov. Chris Sununu told a rally over the weekend. “Did you know [Donald] Trump got 56,000 votes in Iowa, out of over 3 million people!?”

“Is that going to dictate the choice of the Republican Party? I don’t think so,” he went on. “You know what’s going to dictate that choice? You guys.”

Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley leaned in to that spirit when she told a town hall in Milford Jan. 3, “You know Iowa starts it. You know that you correct it.”

Twenty days later, New Hampshire voters will decide whether or not they do, in fact, want to “correct” Iowa.

While the Hawkeye State has a spotty track record of picking Republican nominees, with George W. Bush in 2000 the last contested caucus winner to get the nod, New Hampshire foreshadowed the GOP choice in 2008, 2012 and 2016, the last three times Republicans had a contested primary.

And with the 77-year-old Trump coming off a near-30-point blowout win in Iowa last week, and boasting a double-digit polling lead in New Hampshire, the “correction” may turn into a coronation.

New Hampshire voters are going to decide whether or not to follow suit with Iowa. REUTERS

“Absolutely,” Lizabeth McLaughlin, a Haley backer from Marlborough, told The Post when asked if New Hampshire’s result meant more than Iowa’s..

“We only got like roughly 18% of the voter turnout in Iowa. That’s not an indicator.”

Kim Rice, a Haley backer and former Speaker pro tempore of the New Hampshire House of Representatives, stressed that it was all in good fun between the two early states.

“I have a very good friend in Iowa and I said to her, ‘Thank god Iowans have a sense of humor because Ron DeSantis tried to turn it into something negative,’” Rice said.

“My friend in Iowa, she and I always go back and forth over who’s actually the first in the nation. We’ll see what happens.”

Nikki Haley is hoping for a strong performance in New Hampshire and then plans to turn to South Carolina next. CJ GUNTHER/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

While Haley voters are hoping to change the narrative, backers of Trump are totally fine with following Iowa’s lead.

“New Hampshire is basically a Trump state,” said Dennis Malboeuf, 58.

Trump himself has basked in polling data showing him with a commanding lead.

“Now we’re down to two people and I think one person will be gone probably tomorrow. The other one will be gone in November,” Trump proclaimed at a rally in Laconia on primary eve.

Manufacturing worker Andy Davis, 56, from Hopkinton, was confident that New Hampshire voters would get behind the former president.

Donald Trump has drawn monster crowds in New Hampshire. REUTERS

“I think she’s just part of the system,” he said of Haley. “Whenever the media goes after somebody or if the system goes after somebody, they’re probably telling the truth.”

“I was never a Trump fan prior to politics. I thought he was just a loudmouth New Yorker,” he went on. “But I like what he’s done for the country.”

Former first son Donald Trump Jr. was careful about expectation-setting, though he had no doubt what the final outcome would be.

New Hampshire voters are sorting through the top two Republican contenders. Getty Images

“I don’t like setting unrealistic expectations so that if you miss, it gives the media and the other side and the billionaire donors, that window to drag this on in perpetuity,” Trump Jr. told reporters.

Early polling data has indicated that Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ Sunday exit from the race and subsequent endorsement of Trump has been a boost to the 45th president.

Trump is averaging 55.8% support in New Hampshire, dwarfing Haley’s 36.5% average backing, per the most recent RealClearPolitics aggregate.

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Trump poised to hand Haley a ‘smackdown’ in South Carolina primary: poll

Donald Trump is dominating in South Carolina, leading White House hopeful Nikki Haley in her home state primary by a substantial margin, according to internal polling conducted by the super PAC backing the former president.

“President Trump is set to deliver a South Carolina smackdown to Nikki Haley” reads the memo handed to some of the 77-year-old former president’s donors and supporters Friday by polling firm Fabrizio, Lee and Associates, and obtained by Axios

The memo includes a survey that shows Trump beating Haley by 39 points in the Palmetto State, where she was born and raised and served as governor for six years.

When asked to choose between Trump, Haley and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, 64% of South Carolina Republican voters favored Trump; 25% went for Haley; and only 8% backed DeSantis, according to the poll. 

“What’s worse for Haley,” the pollster notes, is that her supporters appear to be far more uncommitted than Trump’s backers. 


Haley speaks during a campaign event held at DoubleTree by Hilton Manchester on Jan. 19, 2024, in Manchester, New Hampshire. AP

Trump dances off stage at the end of a campaign rally at the Grappone Convention Center on January 19, 2024 in Concord, New Hampshire.
Trump dances off stage at the end of a campaign rally at the Grappone Convention Center on Jan. 19, 2024, in Concord, New Hampshire. Getty Images

A majority of Trump supporters, 58%, responded that they would “definitely” be voting for the former president in the South Carolina primary, whereas only 18% of Haley supporters said the same. 

Even with DeSantis out of the picture, Trump still trounces Haley, according to the poll, beating the former governor 68% to 28% in a head-to-head race. 

Trump further solidified his standing with South Carolinians and dealt a blow to Haley on Friday after receiving the endorsement of Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC) — his onetime rival on the 2024 campaign trail. 

Trump has already received endorsements from half of South Carolina’s GOP congressional delegation — Reps. Russell Fry, William Timmons and Joe Wilson – as well as from Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) and South Carolina Republican Gov. Henry McMaster. 

The South Carolina GOP primary will be held on Feb. 24. 

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Biden announces another $5B in student loan forgiveness after Supreme Court defeat

WASHINGTON — President Biden said Friday that his administration is forgiving another $5 billion in student loan debt for 74,000 people using existing government programs — continuing his piecemeal approach to write-offs after the Supreme Court last year struck down his sweeping plan to forgive $430 billion in college debt.

The latest action brings Biden’s post-ruling loan forgiveness to about $137 billion, according to a Wall Street Journal tally — as the 81-year-old president tries to demonstrate that’s he’s making good on a campaign pledge as he seeks a second term in this year’s election.

Unlike the plan struck down by the Supreme Court in June, under which each borrower would have had $10,000 or $20,000 removed from their federal balances, the latest actions lean on implementation of laws passed with bipartisan support.

The latest beneficiaries include 44,000 teachers, nurses, firefighters and others who qualify for the reprieve after working for 10 years in careers defined as public service under a 2007 law signed by Republican President George W. Bush.

Another 30,000 people are having their debt forgiven because they were entered for 20 years into income-driven repayment plans that cap expenses as a percentage of earnings, according to the White House.

Income-driven repayment programs have been supported by both Republican and Democratic administrations.

“I won’t back down from using every tool at our disposal to get student loan borrowers the relief they need to reach their dreams,” the president said in a statement.

Biden’s nixed forgiveness plan was decried by critics as a political stunt because it was announced shortly before the 2022 midterm elections in response to an activist campaign after fellow Democrats, including then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), said it wouldn’t be legal for him to wipe away student debt with the stroke of a pen.

Republican critics of Biden’s focus on loan forgiveness have called for action to stem the growth of college expenses as a way to reduce debt burden.

After leaving office as vice president, Biden was paid about $1 million to serve as a professor at the University of Pennsylvania from 2017 to 2019, despite making just nine known campus visits and not actually leading any classes.

In 2021, Biden picked Penn President Amy Gutmann, who had also provided him with a DC office where misplaced classified documents were later found, to be US ambassador to Germany.

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To win in 2024, Biden and Trump must fight for our hearts

As an election year dawns, Republicans and Democrats should stop to reflect on why our politics seems so stagnant.

No one expects President Biden to earn a mandate even if he wins re-election — it won’t be a victory for Biden so much as a defeat for Donald Trump.

Progressives don’t see Biden, or Kamala Harris, as an architect for the future.

A second Biden term promises an older, ever less vigorous president facing a world afire and a nation divided to the point of political divorce — with big Republican gains in the 2026 midterms, if history is any guide.

But what if Trump defeats Biden?

In a nonconsecutive second term, Trump will be as old as Biden is now, and he too would likely find the next midterms devastating.

Trump is more spry than Biden and may still personify his party’s ongoing evolution.

He’ll also have a fresh running mate come November, which should help his ticket appear future-oriented.


Columnist Daniel McCarthy believes President Joe Biden and Donald Trump will have to fight hard for votes in 2024. AP/Morry Gash

But the “lawfare” that mostly blue-state and blue-city prosecutors have been waging against Trump will continue if he wins, and the same media that hyped conspiracy theories about Russian collusion in his first term won’t be more fair the second time.

Paralysis seems inevitable.

The reasons for this transcend the parties and their leading personalities — these reasons are rooted in Americans’ changing beliefs about expertise and competence.

In an age when much of rural America didn’t have access to electricity, Franklin Roosevelt and his New Deal seemed like an expressway to the future.

From FDR all the way to Richard Nixon, presidents could rely upon Americans’ trust in technocracy.

It was a time when “I’m from the government, and I’m here to help” wasn’t yet a punchline.

But by the mid-1970s the federal government’s reputation for competence was in tatters, thanks to Vietnam, inflation, fuel shortages and monumental burdens imposed by rising taxes and overregulation.

The era of faith in federal competence thus gave way to an era of hope for a private-sector competence that would be unleashed if only government got out of the way.

This first took shape in the Jimmy Carter years, when a combination of blue-dog Democrats and Republicans in Congress pushed for deregulation.

Ronald Reagan’s presidency was the symbolic zenith of this new confidence in unleashing entrepreneurship, though just as Republicans like Dwight Eisenhower and Nixon testified to the epoch-defining influence of the New Deal mentality, Democrats like Bill Clinton would demonstrate, however reluctantly, the power of the new Reaganite dispensation.

Congress again played a leading role: Once the GOP won the House and Senate in 1994, sweeping reforms to welfare became possible.

By 1996, Clinton himself was announcing, “The era of big government is over.”

The truth is government expanded even as deregulation continued, but public confidence in federal expertise declined relative to faith in the possibilities of the “new economy,” represented above all by the telecommunications industry and the Internet.

But both parties soon changed their emphasis again.

George W. Bush didn’t campaign, or govern, as a slasher of red tape.

Instead his vision was one of competent collaboration between government and the private sector: what he called “compassionate conservatism.”

Barack Obama imagined much the same: Obamacare, after all, was about government creating rules for private insurance companies and their customers (who were, of course, forced to buy their products on pain of government-imposed penalties).

This new philosophy of government backfired spectacularly when instead of restoring faith in expert government, it exposed how incestuous the relationship between corporate America, both parties and higher education had become.

The result was the Tea Party — and Trump.

America was only partly industrialized when expert government first appeared capable of meeting any challenge.

And America was at the dawn of the information revolution when deregulation seemed to answer every question.

Today faith in expertise, public and private, is depleted — and as Harvard reels from its president’s plagiarisms, prospects for renewed confidence in the credentialed elite are bleak.

Instead of pretending to competence they do not possess, both parties would be better off learning to feel what other Americans feel.

Bill Clinton, Barack Obama and Donald Trump, for all their differences, each sensed that empathy, not expertise, would be the key to victory.

Alas, Clinton’s empathy was only that of a seducer, while Obama’s elitism came to the fore as soon as he was elected.

Now the 2024 election hinges on Donald Trump’s emotional connection with the public — a balance of love and hate, trust and fear.

Biden is almost a bystander.

This isn’t a fluke, it’s the future: One way or another, the majorities of tomorrow will be built on emotional relationships, not new New Deals or retro-Reaganism.

The challenge, however, isn’t simply to win but to connect strongly enough to govern.

Daniel McCarthy is the editor of Modern Age: A Conservative Review.

Twitter: @ToryAnarchist

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Donald Trump’s Nikki Haley birdcage stunt is . . . weak

“Birdbrain”? That’s the best Trump could do for Nikki Haley?

Say what you will about the Donald’s third run at the presidency, but the guy’s losing his once-fearsome nicknaming powers. 

“Low Energy Jeb” Bush was an instant classic, and cruelly accurate about Bush’s limp public persona. (Remember “please clap”?)

“Crooked Hillary”? Darn right.  

She engaged in enough document shenanigans to make even Trump blush and helped set up a primo influence-peddling shop, the Clinton Foundation, that would be the envy of La Famiglia Biden.

Sure, we first saw decline with Trump’s lame “Meatball Ron” and tin-eared “DeSanctimonious” jabs at Fla. Gov. Ron DeSantis. 

But the peeved-gramma tone of birdbrain proves he’s slipping. 

Haley is anything but: calm and effective, with a sound grasp of policy.

She was at least arguably the winner of this first two GOP debates, no easy task for a woman dealing with a pack of shouting men.

That’s why the more GOP voters see of her, the more they like her.

To make matters worse, Trump and his team were so proud of themselves that like schoolkids they came up with a harebrained plan to send a birdcage and some bird food to Haley’s hotel room door in the middle of the night.

Haley’s campaign response was dead-on: “weird, creepy and desperate.”

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Don’t count DeSantis out — he may yet take down Trump

The Ron DeSantis presidential campaign sure was good while it lasted. 

The conventional wisdom has turned so decidedly against the Florida governor that he’s getting buried a couple of months before he even announces. 

There’s flaming out on the launch pad, and there’s flaming out while you’re drinking a cup of coffee early in the morning at your home before getting in a car to drive to Cape Canaveral to check in for your mission.

It’s the latter that’s supposedly happening to DeSantis.

This is a bit much. Rumors of his political death are not just greatly exaggerated, they are absurdly overwrought, although that’s what a bout of bad national polling will do. 

To listen to the pundits, DeSantis has gone from the political force who steamrolled his way to a historic re-election victory in a large, diverse former swing state to a socially awkward stumblebum who would stay out of the 2024 race if he knew what’s good for him

It’s wrong to characterize the last couple of months as a loss for DeSantis.

His book was a success, and he’s in the process of racking up an impressive string series of victories during this Florida legislative session.

But there’s no doubt he’s hit turbulence.


A RealClearPolitics polling average said that 50% of Republicans want to elect Trump in 2024.
AP

He, in effect, walked back the line in his statement about the Ukraine war calling the fight with Russia “a territorial dispute,” and he’s never forcefully hit back at Donald Trump, even though the former president has made slamming the governor one of his favorite pastimes. 

Trump has taken a jag up in national polling lately and DeSantis a step down.

In the RealClearPolitics national polling average, Trump sits above 50%, a formidable position by any standard.

DeSantis is far back at about 24%. 

Clearly, some of the shine has come off DeSantis as his re-election win has become more distant, whereas Trump has benefited from getting further away from the debacle of the midterms — and from the free publicity and the GOP sympathy created by the Alvin Bragg indictment. 

Still, DeSantis is a strong second in most states and is well-liked in crucial Iowa.

If the Bragg bump wears off over time and DeSantis gets a bump from his announcement — neither is inevitable, but neither is far-fetched, either — it will look like a very competitive race at the top of the field. 

Besides the latest polling, much of the new conventional wisdom about DeSantis is driven by the assumptions he will never attack Trump and he will be a poor campaigner.

If either is true, he won’t be the nominee.


Joe Biden is topping Donald Trump in many 2024 polls.
REUTERS

But his super PAC is already shooting back at Trump, and if DeSantis isn’t a natural backslapper, he didn’t become the twice-elected governor of Florida by spending all of his time alone at home playing Wordle. 

There’s much about the campaign we still don’t know, and will find out as it takes place.

How does the DeSantis announcement go?

Does the Bragg indictment — and possible subsequent indictments — continue to buoy Trump or eventually weigh him down?

Who else gets in the race?

How vulnerable is the former president to an electability critique?

Who wins and loses the first debate in August?

Does someone else in the field pop?

If Mike Pence gets in, how much traction does he get in Iowa?

And so on. This is why we have primary campaigns, and they always hold surprises.

What we have definitely learned the last couple months is that Donald Trump isn’t going to fade away.

He is the odds-on favorite to be the Republican nominee a third time in a row, and if he is going to be stopped someone is going to have to go out and affirmatively beat him.

Can DeSantis — or in the right circumstances someone else — do that?

It’s an enormous task, but the governor shouldn’t be counted out before he’s in.

Twitter: @RichLowry

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Trump sends out fundraising appeal hours before his arraignment

Former President Donald Trump ​​blasted out a fundraising appeal to his supporters ahead of his arraignment Tuesday, decrying the “loss of justice in America” and saying that he will be “out of commission” for a while. 

Addressing the email to “Patriot,” the 76-year-old Trump said, “today, we mourn the loss of justice in America.”

​”​Today is the day that a ruling political party ARRESTS its leading opponent for having committed NO CRIME​,” the email from the former president’s Make America Great Again campaign proclaimed. 

“As I will be out of commission for the next few hours, I want to take this moment to THANK YOU for all of your support​,” it continued. 

Trump added that he was “blown away” by the money, support and prayers he has received since Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg announced the indictment March 30. 

Since then, the 45th president has raised more than $8 million, including $4 million in the first 24 hours after charges were filed.


Donald Trump, speaking at a rally in Waco, Texas, on March 25, sent out a last-minute fundraising appeal before his scheduled arraignment on Tuesday.
Getty Images

​Trump has spent the past ​two weeks blasting Bragg’s investigation as a “political persecution” while soliciting donations from his MAGA supporters. 

The former president, ​who spent the night in New York after flying up from his Mar-a-Lago resort on Monday, also said, “it’s sad to see what’s happening – not for myself – but for our country.​ ​This is not the America you and I once knew.​”​​

He claimed the US was turning into a “Marxist Third World country that ​CRIMINALIZES dissent and IMPRISONS its political opposition​.​”​

However, Trump also implored his supporters, “do NOT lose hope in America​.”


Donald Trump’s supporters gather Tuesday outside the courthouse in lower Manhattan where the former president will appear for his arraignment.
Getty Images

“​We are a nation that declared its independence from the world’s biggest empire, won two world wars, and landed the first man on the moon. Resilience is in our blood​,” he said, adding that “we will prevail once again and WIN the White House in 2024.”​

Thanking ​his backers for their support, Trump asked: “If you can chip in, please make a contribution peacefully to SAVE AMERICA​.”​​

He signed off on the email with “Your favorite President Donald J. Trump.”​​

The email also contained a small provision.

“​(But if you’re doing poorly due to Biden’s policies, please ignore the donation request. Take care of yourself! We will soon Make America Great Again and our economy will come ROARING BACK!)​”



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Ronna McDaniel’s pathetic bid to ‘unite’ the Republican Party in 2024

Once again displaying her total obliviousness, Republican National Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel announced Sunday that 2024 presidential candidates will likely have to pledge to support the winner in the general election, or they’ll be kept out of the primary debates. Who cares?

This is nothing but a lame attempt to paper over the party’s stark divisions over ex-President Donald Trump, one of three declared candidates so far. The simple fact is that many GOP voters won’t support him if he’s the nominee, and some of his voters likely won’t show for any other Republican.

And all GOP politicians will jump whichever way they think serves their interests best. That includes the candidates themselves: Coming up with excuses to break your most solemn pledge is Politics 101, all across the spectrum.

The real questions turn on what, if any, third-party challenge the loser(s) mount, and who’s peeved enough to spend the general election dumping on the winner.

The main thing that will change all the calculations is how quickly the voters break either for Trump or some other rival, with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis the early leader to play that role. And the debates (whoever shows) will be key.

Stop pretending you can actually chart Republicans’ course, Ronna. It’s not remotely up to you.

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RNC sets up potential showdown with Trump

The head of the Republican National Committee said Sunday she expects all GOP candidates will have to sign a pledge to back the party’s eventual 2024 nominee, creating a potential showdown with ex-President Trump.

RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel told CNN’s “State of the Union” that it’s likely Republican hopefuls will have to promise to throw their backing behind the party’s candidate if they want to get on the debate stage during the primary, calling the move a “no-brainer” to present a united front to try to unseat President Biden. 

“If you’re going to be on the Republican National Committee debate stage asking voters to support you, you should say, ‘I’m going to support the voters and who they choose as the nominee,’ ” McDaniel told host Dana Bash.


Ronna McDaniel, head of the Republican National Committee, says she believes all GOP presidential candidates will have to sign a pledge to support the eventual nominee before getting on the primary debate stage.
REUTERS

McDaniel said that as the head of the RNC, she is expected to support the Republican presidential nominee — and so should the candidates, including Trump, who announced he was running in November. 

“Anybody getting on the Republican National Committee debate stage should be able to say, ‘I will support the will of the voters and the eventual nominee of our party,’ ” she said.

But Bash played a tape of Trump’s interview Feb. 2 on Hugh Hewitt’s radio show in which he was asked whether he would back whoever wins the GOP nomination. 

“It would depend. I would give you the same answer I gave in 2016 during the debates. … It would have to depend on who the nominee was,” the former president said.


Former President Donald Trump, with RNC Chair Ronna McDaniel at a fundraiser in New York in December 2017, has not committed to backing the eventual 2024 Republican presidential nominee if he’s not the choice.
AP

McDaniel said she still believes that all of the Republican candidates will ​sign on to the pledge​ — without exception​.

​”​I think the voters are very intent on winning, and they do not want to see a debate stage of people saying, ‘I’m not going to support this guy,’ ” the RNC chief said. ” ​What [candidates] need to say is, ‘I’m going to do everything I can to defeat Joe Biden. And that​means supporting the nominee of the Republican Party.’ ” 

She said she doesn’t foresee Trump backing out of a debate because he refuses to take the pledge.

“​I think President Trump would like to be on the debate stage. That’s what he likes to do. And I expect that he’ll be there​,” McDaniel said. ​



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Just 30% of voters say Biden should run for reelection: poll

Nearly 60% of voters say that President Biden should not run for reelection in 2024, with most citing his age as the reason for their views, according to a new survey. 

The Redfield & Wilton Strategies poll, done for Newsweek and released on Tuesday, found that 58% of voters do not want the 80-year-old commander-in-chief to seek a second term.

Only 30% of eligible voters polled said that Biden should run again in 2024, and 42% said the president’s advanced age was the most significant reason for their answer. 

Other reasons voters cited for not wanting the octogenarian president to run for reelection included concerns with the Biden administration’s economic policies (16%), preferring other potential Democratic candidates (7%), and the results of the midterm elections (1%). 

The poll, conducted on Dec. 5, surveyed 1,500 eligible voters, 12% of whom were unsure whether they thought Biden should launch a reelection campaign. 

Biden, who is the oldest serving US president in history, has said he expects to run for another four year term but has pushed a final decision back until early next year.

He would be 86 years old when he leaves office if he completes a full second term. 

Biden has reportedly “vented to allies” about how much his age is discussed in the media as he weighs a 2024 run, Politico reported Tuesday.\

“You think I don’t know how f—ing old I am?” an exasperated Biden ranted to one of his acquaintances earlier this year, according to the outlet.

But Biden himself has acknowledged that his age is a “legitimate” issue.

“I think it’s a legitimate thing to be concerned about anyone’s age, including mine,” Biden said during an October interview with MSNBC. “And I think the best way to make the judgment is to watch me. Am I slowing up? Do I have the same pace?” 

In a hypothetical 2024 matchup with former President Donald Trump, the only declared presidential candidate for 2024, Biden beats the 76-year-old Trump 47% to 40%, according to a USA Today/Suffolk University survey released Tuesday.

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