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Trump’s 2024 campaign currently has a new appearance

Trump’s 2024 campaign currently has a new appearance

Trump’s 2024 campaign currently has a new appearance

Trump’s 2024 campaign currently has a new appearance

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  • Donald Trump announces he’s running for US president in 2024.
  • He made his first campaign stops in New Hampshire and South Carolina on Saturday.
  • In both stops, he touted what he said was his record of success during his presidency.
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As some have suspected, Donald Trump’s announcement that he will run for president of the United States in 2024 was not a prank or a scheme to evade prison. He is traveling and creating the kind of foundation required for a real effort to retake the White House.

The former president made his first campaign appearance outside of Florida on Saturday, nearly three months after announcing his bid.

He addressed a Republican Party gathering in New Hampshire and declared the departing state party chair would serve as a key campaign adviser. He also earned the support of Senator Lindsey Graham and South Carolina Governor Henry McMaster at the statehouse in Columbia.

The latter, a Trump ally who showed some disenchantment following the violence at the Capitol on January 6, 2021, is now firmly back in the fold.

How often have you heard the statement, “We like Trump’s policies, but we want someone new?” Mr. Graham questioned the audience. “Without Donald Trump, there would be no Trump policies. I was present.”

Once more, Mr. Trump disputed his loss in the 2020 election and assured his followers that he would be the most successful contender for the Republican Party in 2024, unlike any potential rivals.

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He declared from the main hall of the state capitol, “To alter the whole system, you need a president who can take on the whole system and a president who can win.

In both appearances, Mr. Trump bragged about his accomplishments as president and criticized President Joe Biden’s record on crime, immigration, and the economy.

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Todd Gerhardt, a Charleston-area Republican district executive committee member, was selling honey in plastic bottles styled like Donald Trump across the street.

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Mr. Gerhardt organized a 2016 rally for Mr. Trump on opulent Kiawah Island in South Carolina and most recently paid a visit to the former president’s Mar-a-Lago estate for a fundraiser and to donate his honey for the campaign’s goodie bags. Mr. Gerhardt was an early supporter of Mr. Trump’s first presidential campaign.

He downplayed worries that Republican voters in South Carolina and elsewhere in the country would be seeking for a new nominee this time around, claiming that Mar-a-Lago had a joyful environment as the Trump team prepared for the next fight.

According to Gerhardt, “Trump has actually done it when people talk about other candidates running and they say I’m going to do this or I’m going to do that. He is using all of the oxygen in the space.

 

However, earlier in the day, at a street market a few streets from the capital, Mr. Trump’s visit to Columbia didn’t seem to make much of an impression. A customer at a nearby coffee shop complained that it was improper for the former president to host a campaign rally on state property, but the majority of people there were unaware that he was in town.

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Another local remarked, “There doesn’t seem to be the same enthusiasm for Trump this time around.”

It’s no accident that South Carolina and New Hampshire were the first two destinations on Mr. Trump’s third presidential campaign tour. The two states may end up being crucial to Mr. Trump’s plan to win back the White House.

Although Mr. Trump placed third there in 2016, the evangelical Christians who control the state’s Republican electorate may be considering other candidates, such as former Vice President Mike Pence and former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. Iowa is the first state to hold a Republican presidential nomination contest in 2024.

But Mr. Trump received a one-two punch from New Hampshire and South Carolina in 2016 that propelled him to the lead, which he never gave up.

The same thing is possible in 2024. In reality, South Carolina is distinct among the conventional early voting states in that every Republican presidential contender since 1980 has won the state’s primary.

But this time, South Carolina might present Mr. Trump with a special challenge. Senator Tim Scott and former governor Nikki Haley of the state could both run against him.

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If this is a turning point for Mr. Trump, it comes as polls are beginning to stabilize in his favor following the Republican Party’s poor performance in the November midterm congressional elections.

A recent Emerson Poll revealed that 55% of Republican voters supported Mr. Trump, far more than the 29% who supported Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, who has not declared his candidacy but is seen as the former president’s most competitive opponent. In a December Monmouth poll, Mr. DeSantis was in the lead.

After his followers attacked the US Capitol building earlier this week, Meta suspended Mr. Trump’s accounts. This week, Meta declared that it was lifting the suspension. Even if the former president hasn’t started posting again, his reappearance might present another another chance for voter outreach and funding as his still-sparsely staffed campaign prepares for its 2024 bid.

If Mr. Trump’s previous presidential campaigns were fueled by rallies and Facebook donations, his stop in South Carolina was a different kind of operation.

It was a much more low-key affair than his usual arena gatherings with their carnival vibe, with barely 300 announced guests. It was more common to see sport jackets and gowns than “Make America Great Again” clothing.

However, Mr. Trump will need the backing of both his rally-goers and the political rank-and-file in places like New Hampshire and South Carolina to win a third Republican presidential nomination. While Mr. Trump continues to perform well in national surveys, nearly half of Republican voters in a recent South Carolina poll said they would choose “someone else” over Mr. Trump.

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However, the name “someone else” won’t be on the primary ballot. And since he is still the only declared contender with just over a year until voting begins, Donald Trump is experimenting with various approaches to make his case.

In New Hampshire, Mr. Trump added, “They say he’s not holding rallies and he’s not campaigning, maybe he’s lost his stride.” I’m angrier now,

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