(Washington) “Donald Trump doesn’t want your vote”: Joe Biden’s campaign team launched an ad on Friday to try to attract the voters of Nikki Haley, defeated in the Republican primary by the former president.
The thirty-second video montage compiles excerpts from speeches and interviews with Donald Trump denigrating his former rival, a “sparrow brain” who would be “not the stuff presidents are made from.” »
The video begins with the message “If you voted for Nikki Haley, Donald Trump does not want your vote”, and ends with the 77-year-old mogul assuring that he “doesn’t need more than that” from these voters.
This ad will be broadcast for three weeks on various internet platforms in eight states that promise to be hotly contested in November, and targeting certain residential suburbs where the Republican has had good scores, according to a press release from the president’s campaign team. American, candidate for a second term.
Joe Biden is addressing voters “who want to live in a country protected from the chaos, division and violence that another term of Donald Trump would bring,” commented Michael Tyler, communications director for the 81-year-old Democrat.
Donald Trump far outstripped the former UN ambassador, aged 52, during the primaries.
Nikki Haley withdrew from the race on March 6 and Joe Biden immediately asserted that there “was a place” at his side for supporters of the former governor of South Carolina.
The main person concerned did not give any instructions to her supporters, saying she hoped that Donald Trump would now focus on “deserving [leurs] voice “.
The fifty-year-old never really threatened the billionaire in the race for the White House.
Holding outright conservative positions on the market economy, crime and morals, she has attracted many centrist or independent voters by banking on the desire for political renewal.
The presidential election has every chance, as in 2020, of being decided by small vote differences in a handful of states. Joe Biden and his rival are currently neck and neck in the polls.