Biden backers rev up write-in campaign in New Hampshire to avoid loss

By Jarrett Renshaw

(Reuters) – President Joe Biden’s name will not be on New Hampshire’s primary ballot, but top Democrats are organizing a shoe-string, write-in campaign aimed at preventing an embarrassing loss for the president that might fuel concerns about his 2024 election prospects.

Thousands of voters have already committed to the effort along with county and local party chairs, said California Congressman Ro Khanna, who will lead a call with organizers on Thursday evening on the effort.

For an incumbent president, primary races — the state-by-state competitions that nominate a political party’s official presidential candidate — are normally a perfunctory affair.

But Biden’s decision to sit out New Hampshire’s first-in-the-nation primary on Jan. 23 and ongoing concerns about his general election prospects have attracted intra-party rivals for the White House like Minnesota congressman Dean Phillips.

Phillips and others hope to use New Hampshire as a way to transform their long-shot bids into credible candidacies – a strategy that has some historical precedent.

Pro-Biden Democrats’ volunteer-focused effort, with just a $100,000 budget, will encourage primary voters to put Biden’s name on the New Hampshire ballot. The plan includes putting a volunteer to explain the process at each of New Hampshire’s over-300 polling stations, and distributing pamphlets and printouts.

“It speaks to the loyalty that so many people have in New Hampshire for the Democratic Party and the President,” Khanna said in an interview.

New Hampshire represents the first test of voter enthusiasm for a president battered by a series of polls that show his multi-racial and multi-generational coalition fraying, and its success or failure will be closely watched.

“This write-in campaign is not quite an insurance policy, but it’s definitely a rearguard action to fight against ‘What if Biden doesn’t win the New Hampshire primary’ and what that would signal to the press and to the rest of the political world,” said Andrew Smith, a political science professor at The University of New Hampshire.

Lyndon B. Johnson, then the Democratic incumbent, shunned the New Hampshire primary in 1968 due to over-confidence, only to see an insurgent campaign from Minnesota, U.S. Senator Eugene McCarthy and his anti-Vietnam platform. Johnson supporters mounted a barely successful write-campaign, but a weakened Johnson dropped out of the race weeks later.

The primary will also offer the state’s Democratic voters their first chance to protest Biden’s decision to replace New Hampshire at the top of the party’s primary calendar with South Carolina.

At about 90% non-Hispanic white, versus less than 60% in the rest of the country, New Hampshire is no longer considered a good predictor of Democratic presidential success. But New Hampshire officials refused to change the state’s primary date; as a result, the Democratic winner will not amass any delegates needed to win the nomination. PHILLIPS BUS TOUR

Biden is not expected to campaign in the state ahead of the primary and his rivals – Phillips and self-help guru Marianne Williamson – are seizing on his absence.

Phillips is kicking off a 10-day tour of New Hampshire on Friday that includes traditional stops at diners and college campuses and fundraisers in private homes.

Pass the Torch, a super PAC supporting Phillips is running ads in New Hampshire critical of Biden, including one titled ‘Trump is Winning’ and another that compares Biden’s campaign to a burning dynamite fuse.

Phillips campaign acknowledges that winning the state’s primary will be tough.

“He is still the sitting president of the United States. And so he starts off with an incredible advantage, whether his name is on the ballot or not,” said Jeff Weaver, a senior adviser to the Phillips campaign and one time campaign manager for U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders presidential bid.

WRITE IN EDUCATION

Most, if not all, U.S. elections allow voters to write in candidates whose names are not the the ballot, but the effort is rarely successful at electiong one, outside local contests where turnout is low. U.S. voters sometimes register their frustration with voting choices by writing in names like Batman and Mickey Mouse.

Biden write-in organizers have largely settled on asking voters to write in “Joe Biden,” but believe that other names like “President Biden” and “President Biden and Vice President Harris” satisfy a state law that says to count the vote if the reasonable intent of the voter is clear.

“That’s our job. We want voters to get there and know what to do,” said Dave Watters, a Democratic state senator who is helping organize.

In 2020, when there was a competitive Democratic race, including Sanders, Elizabeth Warren and current Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, some 298,000 Democrats voted in the New Hamphsire primary – more than five times the number that voted when incumbent Democratic President Barack Obama ran unopposed in 2012.

Turnout in 2024 is likely going to be closer to 2012 figures than 2020, local Democrats say, but they are overwhelmingly confident that Biden will win. They hope to be rewarded in 2028 when the party once again considers New Hampshire’s position in the early nominating calendar.

“They’re gonna use this as a way to say, look, we are good Democrats and organized this to protect President Biden,” Smith said.

(Reporting By Jarrett Renshaw; Editing by Heather Timmons and Alistair Bell)

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