Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Trump clinches SC primary victory

Haley’s home-state defeat likely to hike pressure to bow out

- By Meg Kinnard and Will Weissert

CHARLESTON, S.C. — Donald Trump won South Carolina’s Republican primary Saturday, beating former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley in her home state and further consolidat­ing his path to a third straight GOP nomination.

Trump has now swept every contest that counted for Republican delegates, with wins already in Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The former president’s latest victory will likely increase pressure on Haley, who was Trump’s former representa­tive to the U.N. and South Carolina governor from 2011 to 2017, to leave the race.

A 2020 general rematch between Trump and President Joe Biden is becoming increasing­ly inevitable. Haley has vowed to stay in the race through at least the batch of primaries on March 5, known as Super Tuesday, but was unable to dent Trump’s momentum in her home state despite holding far more campaign events and arguing that the indictment­s against Trump will hamstring him against Biden.

The Associated Press declared Trump the winner as polls closed statewide at 7 p.m. The AP based its race call on an analysis of AP VoteCast, a comprehens­ive survey of Republican South Carolina primary voters. The survey confirms the findings of pre-Election Day polls showing Trump far outpacing Haley statewide.

“I have never seen the Republican Party so unified as it is right now,” Trump declared, taking the stage for his victory speech mere moments after polls closed. He added, “You can celebrate for about 15 minutes, but then we have to get back to work.”

South Carolina’s firstin-the-South primary has historical­ly been a reliable bellwether for Republican­s. In all but one primary since 1980, the Republican winner in South Carolina has gone on to be the party’s nominee. The lone exception was Newt Gingrich in 2012.

Haley said in recent days that she would head straight to Michigan for its Tuesday primary, the last major contest before Super Tuesday. She faces questions about where she might be able to win a contest or be competitiv­e.

Trump and Biden are already behaving like they expect to face off in November.

Trump and his allies argue Biden has made the U.S. weaker and point to the chaotic withdrawal from Afghanista­n and Russia’s decision to launch a fullscale invasion of Ukraine. Trump has also repeatedly attacked Biden over high inflation earlier in the president’s term and his handling of record-high migrant crossings at the U.S.-Mexico border.

Trump has questioned — often in harshly personal terms — whether the 81-year-old Biden is too old to serve a second term. Biden’s team in turn has highlighte­d the 77-year-old Trump’s own flubs on the campaign trail.

Biden has stepped up his recent fundraisin­g trips around the country and increasing­ly attacked Trump directly. He’s called Trump and his “Make America Great Again” movement dire threats to the nation’s founding principles, and the president’s reelection campaign has lately focused most of its attention on Trump suggesting he’d use the first day of a second presidency as a dictator and that he’d tell Russia to attack NATO allies who fail to keep up with defense spending obligation­s mandated by the alliance.

Haley also criticized Trump on his NATO comments and also for questionin­g why her husband wasn’t on the campaign trail with her — even as former first lady Melania Trump hasn’t appeared with him. Maj. Michael Haley is deployed in Africa with the South Carolina Army National Guard.

But South Carolina’s GOP voters line up with Trump on having lukewarm feelings about NATO and continued U.S. support for Ukraine, according to AP VoteCast data from Saturday’s primary. About 6 in 10 oppose continuing aid to Ukraine in its fight against Russia. Only about a third described America’s participat­ion in NATO as “very good.”

Haley has raised copious amounts of campaign money and is scheduled to begin a cross-country campaign swing Sunday in Michigan ahead of Super Tuesday on March 5, when many delegate-rich states hold primaries.

But it’s unclear how she can stop Trump from clinching enough delegates to become the party’s presumptiv­e nominee for the third time.

Trump’s political strength has endured despite facing 91 criminal charges related to his efforts to overturn his 2020 election loss to Biden, the discovery of classified documents in his Florida residence and allegation­s that he secretly arranged payoffs to a porn actor.

Trump’s first criminal trial is set to begin March 25 in New York, where he faces 34 counts of falsifying business records related to hush money paid to porn star Stormy Daniels in the closing weeks of his 2016 presidenti­al campaign.

Though Biden is expected to cruise to his party’s renominati­on, he faces criticism from some Democrats for providing military backing to Israel in its war against Hamas in the Gaza Strip. Some in his party support a cease-fire as the death toll in Israel’s war has reached 30,000 people, two-thirds of them women and children. The war could hurt the president’s general election chances in swing states like Michigan, which is home to a large Arab American population.

 ?? CAROLINE GUTMAN/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A voter casts his ballot in the GOP presidenti­al primary Saturday in Charleston, S.C.
CAROLINE GUTMAN/THE NEW YORK TIMES A voter casts his ballot in the GOP presidenti­al primary Saturday in Charleston, S.C.

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