Business Day

Haley tries to halt Trump in New Hampshire

- Gram Slattery, James Oliphant and Nathan Layne Manchester /Reuters

Voters in New Hampshire will decide whether to hand Donald Trump a glide path to the Republican presidenti­al nomination or bolster rival Nikki Haley’s longshot bid to topple him on Tuesday in a pivotal primary election.

The former US president and the former South Carolina governor made their final pitches to voters in what became a twoperson race after Florida governor Ron DeSantis, once seen as the party’s best bet to take on Trump, dropped out and endorsed Trump.

Polls show Trump with a wide lead over Haley, who needs a victory or a strong second place showing in New Hampshire to carry her to the next nominating contest in South Carolina, her home state, where Trump is also dominant in the polls.

Trump had a record-setting victory in Iowa’s first-in-thenation contest last week.

A resounding win in New Hampshire would represent a remarkable show of force early in the campaign and pave the way for him to secure the party’s nomination despite multiple criminal counts against him, two impeachmen­ts and his chaotic 2017-2021 presidency. Trump, who is balancing campaign stops with appearance­s in various courts, denies wrongdoing.

The Republican nominee will face President Joe Biden, the presumptiv­e Democratic nominee, in the general election in November.

In Dixville Notch, a tiny hamlet in northern New Hampshire whose registered voters are always the first to cast ballots in the state, Haley beat Trump 6-0.

Biden is not on the ballot in New Hampshire, having supported an effort by national Democrats to move their first

primary election to the more diverse state of South Carolina. But New Hampshire supporters will still be able to vote for him by writing Biden’s name on the ballot, which would be a barometer of his political strength.

In a bit of counter programmin­g to the Republican race, Biden, whose advisers are expecting a rematch with Trump, is holding a rally in Virginia on Tuesday night with vice-president Kamala Harris to discuss the threat Republican­s would pose to abortion rights if they win back the White House.

The rally comes after Virginia Democrats secured majorities in the state legislatur­e after making abortion a central campaign issue.

The US supreme court, with a conservati­ve majority made possible by three justices who joined the court under Trump, struck down in 2022 the Roe v Wade ruling that guaranteed women’s right to abortion.

AGE

In New Hampshire, Haley is also courting women’s votes, while stepping up her criticism of Trump, for whom she once worked as US ambassador to the UN, by criticisin­g his affinity for strongmen such as Russia’s Vladimir Putin and North Korea’s Kim Jong-un. Haley has also gone after Trump’s age and acuity, attacks she has also regularly levelled at Biden.

Addressing the series of high-ranking officials in South Carolina who have endorsed Trump in recent days, Haley sought to cast herself as the antiestabl­ishment candidate, citing her plans to cut government spending and implement congressio­nal term limits.

“What I will say to Donald Trump is if you have the political elite, you can have them because that’s never who I wanted to work for. I always wanted to serve the people,” Haley told a campaign rally in Salem, New Hampshire, on Monday.

Biden, in addition to focusing on abortion, has cast Trump as a threat to democracy. The former president sought to turn that argument around in remarks at a rally on Monday night.

“Our enemies want to take away my freedom, because I will never let them take away your freedom,” he said at a rally in rural central New Hampshire, to loud applause.

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Nikki Haley

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