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Can Nikki Haley exploit Trump vulnerability in suburbs?

With Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis largely skipping New Hampshire to focus on later primaries, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley now has a kernel of truth for her assertion that “it’s a two-person race” for the Republican presidential nomination – at least in the Granite State.

Polls show her running second here in New Hampshire, on average 13 percentage points behind former President Donald Trump. The battleground demographic is suburban voters – particularly those in the well-populated southeastern region.

Why We Wrote This

Suburban voters often play a pivotal role in U.S. elections. They were key to Joe Biden’s presidential win in 2020. Nikki Haley hopes they’ll propel her to a surprise win in New Hampshire’s Republican primary.

“If she has a chance, it is in the suburban part of the state – especially in the more upper-class, more highly educated towns,” says Andy Smith, director of the University of New Hampshire Survey Center.

A Politico analysis of the Iowa caucuses earlier this week showed that Mr. Trump may be vulnerable among suburbanites. If he becomes the nominee and that pattern plays out nationally, the implications for the general election could be huge.

Ms. Haley’s pitch here is about electability. Her messages resonate with Darcy Tuoti, a retiree in the town of Hooksett. Ms. Tuoti says Ms. Haley “just seems like the person who can hopefully unite the country most.”

Here in suburban Pembroke, New Hampshire, all eight flyers that arrived at the home of some registered Republicans this week focused on former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley: four in support, four against.

And with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis largely skipping New Hampshire to focus on later primaries, Ms. Haley’s assertion that “it’s a two-person race” for the GOP presidential nomination now has a kernel of truth, at least here in the Granite State. Her third-place finish in Monday’s Iowa caucuses, just behind Governor DeSantis and well behind former President Donald Trump, was enough to keep going.

This has been the Haley game plan all along: Make it through Iowa, then go for broke in New Hampshire. Polls show her running second here, on average 13 percentage points behind Mr. Trump. The battleground demographic is suburban voters – particularly those in the southeastern region, two-thirds of the state’s population.

Why We Wrote This

Suburban voters often play a pivotal role in U.S. elections. They were key to Joe Biden’s presidential win in 2020. Nikki Haley hopes they’ll propel her to a surprise win in New Hampshire’s Republican primary.

“If she has a chance, it is in the suburban part of the state – especially in the more upper-class, more highly educated towns,” says Andy Smith, director of the University of New Hampshire Survey Center.

Suburban voters proved pivotal in Joe Biden’s 2020 victory over Mr. Trump. And a Politico analysis of precinct-level results and entrance polls from the Iowa caucuses showed that Mr. Trump may be vulnerable among those same voters in the current cycle. If that plays out nationally, the implications for the general election could be huge if Mr. Trump is the GOP nominee.

Ms. Haley’s pitch here needs to emphasize electability, political analysts say. In a quick appearance Thursday at the iconic Robie’s Country Store in Hooksett, she did just that.

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