Business Day

Haley bows out, clears way for Trump-Biden rematch

• Former South Carolina governor lasted longer than any other Republican challenger

- Gram Slattery and Joseph Ax

Former South Carolina governor Nikki Haley suspended her presidenti­al campaign on Wednesday, ensuring that Donald Trump will win the Republican nomination and once again face Democratic President Joe Biden in November’s election.

Haley urged Trump to try to win the backing of her supporters, which include a significan­t chunk of moderate Republican­s and independen­t voters.

Haley, who served as Trump’s ambassador to the UN when he was president, said throughout her campaign the US must help Ukraine defend itself against Russian aggression, a position at odds with Trump. There was no indication Trump would moderate his message.

“He’ll continue to focus on the issues that matter: immigratio­n, economy, foreign policy,” Karoline Leavitt, press secretary for the Trump campaign, said.

On Tuesday, known as Super Tuesday, Trump beat Haley soundly in 14 of the 15 Republican nominating contests. Haley lasted longer than any other Republican challenger to Trump but never posed a serious threat to the former president, whose iron grip on the party’s base remains firm despite his multiple criminal indictment­s.

The rematch between Trump, 77, and Biden, 81 — the first repeat US presidenti­al contest since 1956 — is one that few Americans want. Opinion polls show both Biden and Trump have low approval ratings among voters.

The election promises to be deeply divisive in a country already riven by political polarisati­on. Biden has cast Trump as an existentia­l danger to democratic principles, while Trump has sought to re-litigate his false claims that he won in 2020.

Haley, 52, had drawn support from deep-pocketed donors intent on stopping Trump from winning a third consecutiv­e Republican presidenti­al nomination, particular­ly after she notched a series of strong performanc­es at debates that Trump opted to skip. She ultimately failed to pry loose enough conservati­ve voters in the face of Trump’s dominance.

But her stronger showing among moderate Republican­s and independen­ts — she won unaffiliat­ed voters by a wide margin in New Hampshire and notched almost 40% of the vote in South Carolina — highlighte­d how Trump’s scorched-earth style of politics could make him vulnerable in the November 5 election.

On March 3, she won the Washington, DC, Republican primary with 62.9% of the vote, versus 33.2% for Trump. On Tuesday, her only win came in Vermont, a small, deeply Democratic state.

Biden has his own baggage, including widespread concern about his age. Three-quarters of respondent­s in a February Reuters/Ipsos poll said he was too old to work in government, after already serving as the oldest US president in history. About half of respondent­s said the same about Trump.

As in 2020, the race is likely to come down to a handful of swing states, thanks to the winner-take-all, state-by-state Electoral College system that determines the presidenti­al election. Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin are all expected to be closely contested in November.

The central issues of the campaign have already come into focus. Despite low unemployme­nt, a red-hot stock market and easing inflation, voters have voiced dissatisfa­ction with Biden’s economic performanc­e.

Biden’s other major weakness is the state of the US-Mexico border, where a surge of migrants overwhelme­d the system after Biden eased some Trump-era policies. Trump’s hawkish stance on immigratio­n

— including a promise to initiate the largest deportatio­n effort in history — is at the core of his campaign, just as it was in 2016.

Voters expect Trump would do a better job on both the economy and immigratio­n, according to opinion polls.

Republican legislator­s, egged on by Trump, rejected a bipartisan immigratio­n enforcemen­t bill in February, giving Biden an opportunit­y to argue that Republican­s are more interested in preserving the southern border as a problem rather than finding a solution.

Democrats are also optimistic that voter sentiment on the economy will shift in Biden’s favour if economic trends go on rising throughout 2024.

Trump may be dogged by criminal charges throughout the year, though the schedule of his trials remains unclear. The federal case charging him with trying to overturn the 2020 election, perhaps the weightiest he faces, has been paused while Trump pursues a long-shot argument that he is immune from prosecutio­n.

While most Republican­s view his indictment­s as politicall­y motivated, according to Reuters/Ipsos polling about a quarter of Republican­s and half of independen­ts say they will not support him if he is convicted of a crime before the election.

Biden has said Trump poses a threat to democracy, citing the January 6 2021, attack on the US Capitol by a mob of Trump supporters seeking to reverse Biden’s 2020 victory.

Abortion, too, will play a crucial role after the nine-member US supreme court, buoyed by three Trump appointees, eliminated a nationwide right to terminate pregnancie­s in 2022.

The subject has become a political liability for Republican­s, helping Democrats overperfor­m expectatio­ns in the 2022 midterm elections.

Abortion rights advocates have launched efforts to put the issue before voters in several states, including the battlegrou­nd of Arizona.

Haley, a former governor of South Carolina, had been among the first Republican contenders to enter the race in February 2023, but she was largely an afterthoug­ht until garnering attention for her standout debate performanc­es later in the year.

Through it all, she was reluctant to completely disavow her former boss. Trump showed no such reticence, frequently insulting her intelligen­ce and Indian heritage.

Only in the last months of her campaign did Haley begin to forcefully hit back at Trump, questionin­g his mental acuity, calling him a liar and saying he was too afraid to debate her. In the final weeks of the campaign, she became the standard-bearer for the anti-Trump wing of the party, a dramatic evolution for someone who just months earlier praised the former president.

Still, she said that as president she would pardon Trump if he were convicted in any of the criminal cases he faces.

TRUMP’S SCORCHED-EARTH STYLE OF POLITICS COULD MAKE HIM VULNERABLE IN THE NOVEMBER 5 ELECTION

 ?? /Reuters ?? Off the trail: Nikki Haley announces in Charleston, South Carolina, on Wednesday that .she is suspending her campaign to be the Republican presidenti­al candidate.
/Reuters Off the trail: Nikki Haley announces in Charleston, South Carolina, on Wednesday that .she is suspending her campaign to be the Republican presidenti­al candidate.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa