San Francisco Chronicle

Death of Scalia becomes focus of GOP debate

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GREENVILLE, S.C. — Republican White House hopefuls insisted that President Obama step aside and allow his successor to nominate the next Supreme Court justice, in a raucous Saturday night debate that also featured harshly personal jousting over immigratio­n and foreign policy.

The debate was shaken by the death of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia hours before the candidates took the stage. Among the contenders, only Jeb Bush said Obama had “every right” to nominate a justice during his final year in office. The former Florida governor said there should be “consensus orientatio­n on that nomination” — but added that he didn’t expect Obama would pick a candidate in that vein.

The five other candidates on the stage urged the Republican-led Senate to block any attempts by the president to get his third nominee on the court.

“It’s up to Mitch McConnell and everybody else to stop it,” Donald Trump said. “It’s called delay, delay, delay.”

A debate that began with a somber moment of silence for Scalia devolved quickly into fighting between Trump and Bush. The exchanges highlight- ed the bad blood between the real estate mogul who leads the Republican field and the former Florida governor who was once expected to sail to the nomination.

In a particular­ly heated confrontat­ion, Trump accused Bush’s brother — former President George W. Bush — of having lied to the public about the Iraq war. “Obviously the war in Iraq was a big fat mistake,” Trump said.

Trump was jeered lustily by the audience in South Carolina, a state where the Bush family is popular with Republican­s. George W. Bush plans to campaign with his brother in Charleston on Monday, making his first public foray into the 2016 race.

Sens. Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio also revived their fight over immigratio­n, with the Texas senator haranguing his Florida counterpar­t for sponsoring failed legislatio­n that would have created a pathway to citizenshi­p for many of those in the United States illegally. Cruz also accused Rubio of taking a more moderate approach when speaking to Spanish-language media in an attempt to appeal to Hispanics.

“I don’t know how he knows what I said on Univision — he doesn’t speak Spanish,” Rubio shot back.

Just six contenders took the debate stage, far from the long line of candidates who participat­ed in earlier GOP events. Yet the Republican race remains deeply uncertain, with party elites still hoping that one of the more mainstream candidates will rise up to challenge Trump and Cruz. Many GOP leaders believe both would be unelectabl­e in November.

 ?? Jim Watson / AFP / Getty Images ?? Republican presidenti­al candidates Ted Cruz (left), Donald Trump and Marco Rubio join the debate in Greenville, S.C.
Jim Watson / AFP / Getty Images Republican presidenti­al candidates Ted Cruz (left), Donald Trump and Marco Rubio join the debate in Greenville, S.C.

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