The Manila Times

Trump seeks to blitz Haley in ‘Super Tuesday’ states

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WASHINGTON, D.C.: Donald Trump is looking to cement his hold on the Republican presidenti­al nomination on Tuesday as millions of Americans head to the polls for one of the most important days of the United States electoral calendar.

“Super Tuesday” — the primary cycle’s largest single day of voting, with contests in 15 states and one territory — is historical­ly a defining moment in the race for the presidenti­al nomination.

But the suspense of previous election years will largely be absent this time around, with Trump expected to continue his sweep of Republican primary states, closing the door on his sole remaining challenger Nikki Haley, his former ambassador to the United Nations.

“We’ve been sort of in a rocket, we’ve been launching like a rocket, to the Republican nomination,” Trump told supporters at a weekend rally in Virginia’s state capital Richmond, touting his victories in Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina.

But he made clear that he is already looking past the primary to the autumn presidenti­al election itself, telling the crowd: “The biggest day in the history of our country is November 5.”

President Joe Biden, who trails his predecesso­r in most swing state polls for the general election, has his own primary contest on the Democratic side, but his victory is considered a formality.

Haley lost the early nominating states to Trump by wide margins, but has vowed to remain in the presidenti­al contest at least until Super Tuesday voters have their say.

The lineup of states up for grabs includes the giant battlegrou­nds of California and Texas, allowing hopefuls to bag 70 percent of the delegates they need to be named the presumptiv­e nominee.

Trump cannot mathematic­ally close out the contest on Tuesday night, but expects to be anointed by March 19 at the latest, his campaign said.

Haley, 52, has been making an electabili­ty argument that the public has rejected Trumpism in almost every vote since 2016 and would do so again in November.

She also warns of the “chaos” surroundin­g a candidate who, in just the last few months, has been labeled an insurrecti­onist by a federal judge and found liable for sexual assault and business fraud running to hundreds of millions of dollars.

Trump — who denies all wrongdoing — also faces the threat of jail time from multiple federal and state felony charges, mostly for allegedly trying to cheat in or steal the 2016 and 2020 elections.

Trump, 77, has spent nine days in court this year alone and complains that his prosecutio­ns are keeping him from the campaign trail — although many of his appearance­s have been voluntary, used afterward as part of his fundraisin­g appeals.

As he makes his case for reelection in a televised address on Tuesday at his beach club in south Florida, Trump’s lawyers will be preparing their own arguments for his March 25 trial in New York for alleged 2016 campaign finance violations.

Meanwhile, the former president has been celebratin­g Supreme Court decisions delaying his 2020 federal election conspiracy trial in Washington — possibly until after November — and keeping him on the ballot in three states that wanted to exclude him as an insurrecti­onist.

Haley told NBC on Sunday she no longer felt bound to her Republican Party pledge to vote for Trump if he was the nominee, sparking speculatio­n over a potential third-party run.

Biden — who will deliver his annual State of the Union address from Congress on Thursday — also faces division among Democrats, although he is expected to sail past challenger­s Dean Phillips and Marianne Williamson, both minor political figures, in his primary.

A New York Times survey published on Saturday flagged waning support among normally reliable constituen­cies like blue-collar workers and nonwhite voters.

Almost two-thirds of voters who supported the 81-year-old in 2020 say he is too old to lead the country effectivel­y, the poll says.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? NO STOPPING HIM
Donald Trump gestures during a rally at the Greater Richmond Convention
Center in Richmond, Virginia, on March 2, 2024.
AFP PHOTO NO STOPPING HIM Donald Trump gestures during a rally at the Greater Richmond Convention Center in Richmond, Virginia, on March 2, 2024.

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