Shanghai Daily

Trump nears Biden rematch with New Hampshire primary victory

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DONALD Trump won the key New Hampshire primary on Tuesday, moving him ever closer to locking in the Republican presidenti­al nomination and securing an extraordin­ary White House rematch with Joe Biden.

With around 90 percent of votes counted, Trump’s winning margin hovered at about 11 percentage points, but his sole remaining challenger Nikki Haley vowed to fight on.

Trump, 77, attacked Haley in a rambling victory speech and said that when the primary contest reaches her home state of South Carolina, “we’re going to win easily.”

Trump’s address was loaded with his trademark ominous warnings about immigratio­n as he continued to lie about winning the 2020 election.

In her speech, Haley insisted the race was “far from over” and told supporters that Democrats actually want to run against her former boss, due to his record of sowing “chaos.”

“They know Trump is the only Republican in the country who Joe Biden can defeat,” Haley, 52, said.

Despite adding New Hampshire to his previous easy victory in Iowa — and looking near unstoppabl­e as he seeks to become the Republican candidate in November — Trump kept to his hard-right messaging, with no hint of reaching out to the more moderate voters who supported Haley.

At one point swearing on primetime TV, Trump said the United States was a “failing country” and claimed that undocument­ed migrants were coming from psychiatri­c hospitals and prisons and “killing our country.”

President Biden responded by saying: “It is now clear that Donald Trump will be the Republican nominee.”

“And my message to the country is the stakes could not be higher. Our Democracy. Our personal freedoms — from the right to choose to the right to vote,” Biden said in a statement.

With strong turnout in the northeaste­rn state, Haley had hoped for a major upset. But US broadcaste­rs quickly projected her defeat as the first tallies came in.

Trump was already the runaway leader in national Republican polling, despite two impeachmen­ts as president, and four criminal trials hanging over him since leaving office.

While Haley repeatedly questioned Trump’s mental fitness, her efforts in New Hampshire were not expected to create much more than a speed bump for the populist right-winger’s surge to November.

“I think it’s a two-person race now between Trump and Biden,” Keith Nahigian, a veteran of six presidenti­al campaigns and former member of Trump’s transition team, said.

New Hampshire was markedly more Haley-friendly than the states she will subsequent­ly face, should she stay in the race, and continuing into February and South Carolina will be a tough sell.

Trump won a crushing victory in the first Republican contest in Iowa last week, with Haley a distant third.

What was once a crowded field of 14 candidates then narrowed to a one-on-one matchup on Sunday after Florida Governor Ron DeSantis dropped out following his second-place Iowa finish.

No Republican has ever won both opening contests and not ultimately secured the party’s nomination.

Biden, meanwhile, won an unofficial Democratic primary in New Hampshire, giving him a symbolic boost.

(AFP)

 ?? ?? Former US President Donald Trump gestures during his New Hampshire presidenti­al primary election night watch party, in Nashua, New Hampshire, on Tuesday. — Reuters
Former US President Donald Trump gestures during his New Hampshire presidenti­al primary election night watch party, in Nashua, New Hampshire, on Tuesday. — Reuters

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