The Guardian (USA)

Republican debate: Haley and DeSantis exchange barbs in fight for second place

- Alice Herman

The fifth Republican presidenti­al debate started and ended with barbed exchanges between Nikki Haley and Ron DeSantis, with neither likely to have moved closer to eclipsing frontrunne­r Donald Trump in the Iowa caucus next week.

The Florida governor condemned Haley for running “to do her donors’ bidding” and the former UN ambassador called DeSantis a habitual liar. The early tone in the Iowa debate matched prior Republican debates, which were frequently hostile, with candidates hurling personal attacks at one another.

Trump has repeatedly declined to debate his party’s opponents, and skipped this debate as well, instead participat­ing in a town hall hosted by Fox News, also in Iowa.

Unlike the prior debates, this one was not coordinate­d by the Republican National Committee (RNC), which decided in December to stop hosting GOP debates for the rest of the primary season.

The RNC debates narrowed the field of Republican contenders to five, and CNN’s debate requiremen­t that candidates poll at 10% in at least three national or Iowa-based surveys has left only Haley, DeSantis and Trump qualifying.

Chris Christie, Trump’s most vociferous critic among the Republican contenders, did not make the cut and announced on Wednesday he was ending his bid for president. Christie had polled low ahead of the first primary in Iowa, and said at a town hall in Windham, New Hampshire, that he would continue to try to make sure Trump would not “ever be president of the United States again”.

He was overheard on a hot mic before his event began criticizin­g Haley. “She’s going to get smoked,” he said in an audio broadcast on the campaign’s livestream feed. “She’s not up to this.”

He was also overheard saying DeSantis had called him, petrified, but the audio was cut before he finished the thought.

Christie leaves Haley, DeSantis, Trump and Vivek Ramaswamy in the race for the Republican nomination.

Ramaswamy, the rightwing tech entreprene­ur who has billed himself as a youthful Maga answer to Trump and has peddled conspiracy theories, including claiming the January 6 Capitol

riot was an “inside job”, did not qualify. Ramaswamy, who has spent the most time in Iowa out of all the candidates, has said he will instead participat­e in a Des Moines taping of a podcast with the rightwing commentato­r Tim Pool.

DeSantis and Haley appeared aligned on issues ranging from the economy to immigratio­n, clashing mainly over foreign policy and denouncing each other’s records as governors. DeSantis, who has often appeared tense onstage, seemed more comfortabl­e as the GOP debate progressed, painting Haley as insufficie­ntly hawkish on China and calling into question her conservati­ve record.

In response to an early question on the economy, Haley condemned pandemic-era spending bills, saying: “I think we have to acknowledg­e that Republican­s and Democrats have both done this.”

“We have a spending problem in this country,” DeSantis concurred, claiming the IRS had been “weaponized” against Republican­s. “There’s gonna be a new sheriff in town,” he added.

The candidates competed to put forward militant opposition to increased immigratio­n, calling for a crackdown on so-called “sanctuary cities” and illegal immigratio­n.

DeSantis attempted to distinguis­h himself from Haley, condemning her for a past comment calling for the humanizati­on of immigrants and invoking the xenophobic and inaccurate idea that immigrants are dangerous criminals. A Haley presidency, DeSantis said, would be “like having the fox guarding the hen house”.

“They all have to go back,” DeSantis of undocument­ed immigrants.

DeSantis later called into question Haley’s 2020 Twitter post calling George Floyd’s death “personal and painful for many” and claimed that Iowans and others outside the state of Minnesota had “nothing to do with” the police killing.

Haley defended her words, acknowledg­ing anti-Black violence in the US and defending her move as governor of South Carolina “to bring the Confederat­e flag down” after the white supremacis­t Dylann Roof opened fire on a Charleston Black church in 2015, killing nine congregant­s.

On foreign policy, DeSantis and Haley clashed over their positions on aid to Ukraine and Israel.

“You have to be a friend to get a friend,” said Haley, who said she supported continued military aid to Ukraine.

DeSantis, who has aligned himself with the pro-Trump segment of the Republican party’s increasing opposition to aid for Ukraine, called support for Ukraine a “UN way of thinking”, and decried the defense of Ukraine against Russia as a mission of “globalists”.

“You can take the ambassador out of the United Nations, but you can’t take the United Nations out of the ambassador,” DeSantis said, to jeers and applause.

On Israel, DeSantis, whose campaign dropped a staffer who shared neo-Nazi memes and has rejected calls

 ?? ?? Ron DeSantis and Nikki Haley spar during the debate in Iowa on Wednesday night. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images
Ron DeSantis and Nikki Haley spar during the debate in Iowa on Wednesday night. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

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