Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Voters in S.C. welcome but have doubts on Desantis

- By Meg Kinnard

MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. — Ron Desantis on Saturday tried to frame his White House campaign as the one that can top GOP front-runner Donald Trump and Nikki Haley in pivotal South Carolina, but some who came out to see him in this coastal tourist mecca said they felt the state was likely to go the former president’s way in next month’s primary.

It was some of the same sentiment too in Desantis’ stop at a diner in Florence, where the former Navy officer leaned into his experience as the “only veteran running for president.”

“Everybody’s scared to death of Trump,” said Steven Best, a Trump supporter who said he only came out to see Desantis because his wife wanted to, citing efforts to remove Trump from the ballot over his attempt to overturn the 2020 election as support for his viewpoint.

“I love his message,” said David Steding as he and his wife waited for the Florida governor earlier in Myrtle Beach. “I just don’t think he’s going to win here.”

The Stedings were among hundreds waiting to see Desantis take the stage at a restaurant just off one of the main thoroughfa­res in Myrtle Beach. He scheduled two other stops Saturday in a state whose primary has historical­ly been influentia­l in determinin­g the party’s nominee.

The events reflect his decision to shift his campaign away from New Hampshire and its leadoff Republican primary on Tuesday, where he is not expected to match his finish in last Monday’s Iowa causes, won by Trump with Desantis edging Haley for second.

At his first appearance, Desantis jabbed at Haley, a former governor of South Carolina, which holds its primary on Feb. 24. He asked the crowd to “tell me major achievemen­ts of Nikki Haley when she was governor? Anybody?”

After someone shouted out “gas tax” — which both Desantis and Trump have accused Haley of trying to raise during her six years in office — Desantis said it was notable that “nobody named an achievemen­t.” He said “the hands would shoot up” if people in a Florida crowd were asked to list his accomplish­ments during just over one term in office.

Desantis and Trump have argued that Haley, when governor, flipfloppe­d over her support for a gas tax. A super PAC supporting Trump’s campaign has run a TV ad mashing up clips of State of the State addresses in which she opposed, then called for, such a measure. Haley has characteri­zed the critiques as evidence that her opponents are threatened by her candidacy.

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