October 16, 2024
The smell of fried fish was lingering on Sunday afternoon, October 13, and there was Bill Clinton beneath a tree, wearing a Harris-Walz camouflage cap and edging closer and closer to his modest audience the longer he spoke, reports The New York Times.
It was a fittingly intimate setting for Peach County, Georgia, a county where elections are decided by mere hundreds of votes. And for Clinton, who rose to power as “the man from Hope,” drawing on his Arkansas roots, it was a chance to engage in a little homespun politicking before early voting began Tuesday in Georgia, a key battleground state.
From a church service in Albany, where the former president reminisced about campaigning alongside the baseball great Hank Aaron, to the fish fry in Fort Valley attended by a few hundred people, Clinton used the opening hours of a two-day blitz to try to help Harris bump up her score wherever she can.
Clinton’s tour reflected a Democratic effort to inspire voters well beyond Atlanta and its potentially pivotal suburbs. It’s a strategy that the Harris campaign is using in several swing states, where they are chasing votes—not just in their traditional strongholds, but also trying to drive up their margins in other areas.
Former President Donald Trump will try to strike back with no fewer than three speeches in Georgia over this week and next.
So, Clinton sought to draw a direct line from the fields of Georgia to the West Wing. (In a nod to Governor Tim Walz of Minnesota, the Nebraska-born Democratic nominee for vice president, Clinton riffed about how “it will not hurt to have somebody in the vice president’s office [who] follows the price of corn and wheat and soybeans.”)
Clinton made sporadiccally wonkish detours, including a bit about the profit margins of major grocers. But from the first moments at the fish fry, where he congratulated the local college on its victory in Saturday’s homecoming game, Clinton largely pursued a strategy of familiarity, leaning on his own record in the state, naming decades-long allies and talking of long-ago campaigning.
“They’ve got one heck of a hill to climb if we do win Georgia,” Clinton said of Republicans like Trump.
“It won’t hurt … Trump to climb a few more hills,” Clinton said to roars of laughter. “I’ll even pray for him, but not to get to the top before we do.”
Research contact: @nytimes