Connecticut Post (Sunday)

Haley challenges Trump on her S.C. home turf

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CONWAY, S.C. — With two weeks to go before the South Carolina Republican primary, Nikki Haley is trying to challenge Donald Trump on her home turf while the former president tries to quash his last major rival’s narrow path to the nomination.

Trump, turning his campaign focus to the southern state days after an easy victory in Nevada, was expected to rev up his supporters at a Saturday afternoon rally in Conway, near Myrtle Beach.

Trump, who has long been the frontrunne­r in the GOP presidenti­al race, won three contests in a row and is looking to use South Carolina’s Feb. 24 primary to shutter Haley’s chances and turn his focus fully on an expected rematch with Democratic President Joe Biden in the general election.

Haley skipped the Nevada caucuses, condemning the contest as rigged for Trump, and has instead focused on South Carolina, kicking off a two-week bus tour across the state where she served as governor from 2011 to 2017.

Speaking to about a couple hundred people gathered outside a historic opera house in Newberry on Saturday morning, Haley painted Trump as someone an erratic and self-absorbed figure not focused on the American people.

She pointed to the way he flexed his influence over the Republican Party this past week, successful­ly pressuring GOP lawmakers in Washington to reject a bipartisan border security deal and publicly pressed Republican National Committee Chair Ronna McDaniel to consider leaving her job.

“What is happening?” Haley said. “On that day of all those losses, he had his fingerprin­ts all over it,” she added.

Haley reprised her questions of Trump’s mental fitness, an attack she has sharpened since a Jan. 19 speech in which he repeatedly confused her with former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Haley, 52, has called throughout her campaign for mental competency tests for politician­s, a way to contrast with 77-year-old Trump and 81year-old Biden.

“Why do we have to have someone in their 80s run for office?” she asked. “Why can’t they let go of their power?”

A person in the crowd shouted out: “Because they’re grumpy old men!”

“They are grumpy old men,” Haley said.

Harlie O’Connell, a longtime South Carolina resident who backs Haley, said she’s excited to vote in the presidenti­al primary for a woman from her home state.Bob Pollard, a retired firefighte­r, said Haley showed “level-headedness” that Trump lacks in the way she responded to the 2015 shooting at a Charleston church in which a white supremacis­t killed nine Black members of the congregati­on.

Pollard cannot support Trump because “he’s a maniac” and said his campaign, in which he speaks frequently of “retributio­n” and his personal grievances, has “turned into a personal vendetta.”

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