Las Vegas Review-Journal

Trump claims GOP win in Iowa during rally

Uses campaign speech to attack Nikki Haley

- By Thomas Beaumont

DES MOINES, Iowa — Donald Trump predicted Sunday he would win Iowa’s Republican presidenti­al caucuses in January, tossing aside what he called advisers’ caution not to overstate expectatio­ns, even as he greeted his audience by naming a city in a neighborin­g state. “I go around saying of course we’re going to win Iowa. My people said you cannot assume that,” Trump told his audience in the ornate Orpheum Theater in Sioux City, Iowa. “There’s no way Iowa is voting against Trump,” he said, noting the economic benefits to farm states from the tariffs his administra­tion imposed on China. And yet, when Trump took the stage he gave a hearty hello to a city more than 80 miles north and over the South Dakota state line. “Hello to a place where we’ve done very well, Sioux Falls. Thank you very much,” he said, before correcting himself several minutes later. It was Trump’s eighth campaign event in Iowa in a little more than a month, part of the former president’s accelerate­d fall schedule leading up to the first-in-the-nation caucuses in January. Trump’s speech in Sioux City, the heart of Gop-heavy western Iowa, followed events over the past month in eastern and central Iowa, where he has drawn thousands of people as his team has attempted to run a more organized campaign than in 2016, when the celebrity, real estate mogul was unfamiliar with the process. While Trump has for months attacked Florida Gov. Ron Desantis, the former president stepped up his criticism Sunday of former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley, a member of Trump’s Cabinet, as she has sparked new curiosity among Iowa Republican­s and a bump in polls. Trump mocked Haley, who is also the former governor of South Carolina, for saying after leaving the United Nations post that she would not run for president if Trump also did in 2024. Trump went on to suggest that a reason he appointed Haley to his Cabinet when she was still governor was to help Henry Mcmaster, thensouth Carolina’s lieutenant governor and a devout Trump supporter, become governor. Trump’s more pointed criticism of Haley, centered on not her performanc­e in his Cabinet but disloyalty to him, came a day after she criticized him for praising foreign strongmen and warned that his style of “chaos, vendettas and drama” would be dangerous. Though Haley has used the implied criticism of Trump without naming him for months as she’s campaigned in early-voting states, Saturday was her sharpest critique of the former president as she spoke before the Republican Jewish Coalition’s annual meeting in Las Vegas. Before Trump took the stage in Sioux City, he was endorsed by Ben Carson, a neurosurge­on who unsuccessf­ully sought the 2016 GOP nomination but later served in Trump’s Cabinet as secretary of Housing and Urban Developmen­t.

 ?? ?? Charlie Neibergall The Associated Press Former President Donald Trump dances on stage during a commit to caucus rally Sunday in Sioux City, Iowa. “There’s no way Iowa is voting against Trump,” he said.
Charlie Neibergall The Associated Press Former President Donald Trump dances on stage during a commit to caucus rally Sunday in Sioux City, Iowa. “There’s no way Iowa is voting against Trump,” he said.

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