Manila Bulletin

Trump rides Iowa landslide to New Hampshire, with stop in court

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ATKINSON, United States (AFP) – Donald Trump steamrolle­d into New Hampshire Tuesday after his crushing win in Iowa cemented him as the likely Republican presidenti­al nominee -- stopping on the way for a defamation trial that underscore­s how much the road to November’s election remains in uncharted territory.

The twice-impeached former president romped home in the first contest of the drawn-out 2024 race for the White House, scoring 51 percent of Republican voters to trounce rivals Ron Desantis and Nikki Haley for the biggest Iowa caucus victory in modern history.

Victory in next Tuesday’s New Hampshire primary would mean Trump, 77, could all but seal the nomination -- and a grudge rematch against President Joe Biden -- as he aims for a sensationa­l White House comeback despite a string of scandals that would sink most other politician­s.

Before heading to the New England state, though, Trump had another appointmen­t, appearing in a New York courtroom where he is on trial for defamation in the wake of a jury finding he was liable for a 1990s sexual assault against writer E. Jean Carroll.

Trump has used the Carroll case, and 91 criminal indictment­s on allegation­s including his bid to overturn the 2020 loss to Biden, to galvanize Republican supporters with his claims of a “deep state” trying to keep him out of power.

While Trump’s victory speech in a wintry Iowa at first struck an unusually conciliato­ry note -- saying it was “time now for everybody, the country, to come together” -- he soon reverted to the harsh rhetoric that promises one of the most divisive elections in memory.

He vowed to shut the Mexican border to stop an “invasion” of migrants, and hammered home the abrasive messaging that has fired up his base as he seeks what he says will be “retributio­n” against Democrat Biden.

For his part, Biden sought to reassure his supporters that Trump’s strong showing in Iowa was not cause for alarm.

“I am still the only person to ever beat Donald Trump and I am looking forward to doing it again -- for the good of this country,” he said in a video posted on X, formerly Twitter.

‘Impressive’

As snow piled up in Atkinson, some 40 miles (65 kilometers) from New Hampshire capital Concord, hundreds of Trump supporters gathered for the ex-president’s latest campaign stop Tuesday.

“I expect a landslide in the primary,” Loribeth Calderwood, a waitress, told AFP while waiting in line, covered head-to-toe in a blanket to keep warm. “And if he doesn’t, I think it’s because they stole the election again.”

“It’s over, they should just stop the primary,” said Edward X. Young, who drove 11 hours from New Jersey. “He’s the Republican candidate... come on.”

Florida Governor Desantis and former UN ambassador Haley will also head to the East Coast state as they scramble to shore up their campaigns.

Ahead of Trump’s arrival in New Hampshire, plumber Vern Aylward, 64, said he was “happily surprised” by the size of Trump’s Iowa win.

“I think he proved himself when he was president,” Aylward told AFP after parking his white pickup truck. “The gas, price of food, just seemed like everything was going swimmingly.”

 ?? ?? TIME TO COME TOGETHER – Former US President and Republican presidenti­al hopeful Donald Trump arrives to speaks at a watch party during the 2024 Iowa Republican presidenti­al caucuses in Des Moines, Iowa, on January 15, 2024. (AFP)
TIME TO COME TOGETHER – Former US President and Republican presidenti­al hopeful Donald Trump arrives to speaks at a watch party during the 2024 Iowa Republican presidenti­al caucuses in Des Moines, Iowa, on January 15, 2024. (AFP)

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