Las Vegas Review-Journal

The Republican field narrows

GOP has two solid alternativ­es to Trump

- The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

If Republican voters decide to move on from former President Donald Trump, two clear alternativ­es have emerged. On Wednesday, four Republican candidates gathered for the fourth GOP presidenti­al debate. Unlike some past debates, this one had good flow and clash without turning into a hard-to-follow shouting match. Megyn Kelly excelled as both a tough questioner and cat wrangler.

Responding to Nikki Haley’s rise in the polls — she’s now second in most surveys — Florida Gov. Ron Desantis drew contrasts with the former South Carolina governor. He highlighte­d difference­s on issues including China, immigratio­n and “gender reassignme­nt” surgery for minors.

Gov. Desantis also proposed putting universiti­es on the hook for student debt. Done properly, that could incentiviz­e higher education institutio­ns to focus on producing graduates with useful skills and capable of reasoning, instead of zealots for critical race theory. Especially as many colleges expose their moral bankruptcy by protecting antisemiti­sm on campus, this is a policy idea worth exploring.

Vivek Ramaswamy also made a point of taking on Ms. Haley, another indication of her rise in the polls. But the entreprene­ur seems to have given up running a serious campaign in pursuit of viral moments for social media. Serving on the board of Boeing isn’t the liability for Ms. Haley that he tried to make it out to be.

Meanwhile Chris Christie has failed to move the needle for Republican voters.

A recent New York Times poll shows Mr. Trump leading President Joe Biden in five of six important swing states.

But it also shows Ms. Haley and Gov. Desantis doing well against Mr. Biden in those states — in fact, Ms. Haley exceeded Mr. Trump’s numbers in a hypothetic­al race against the president.

Mr. Trump, who has avoided all the GOP debates, remains well ahead among Republican­s, according to polls, with the Iowa caucus just two months away. But he remains a divisive figure who has devoted little effort to expanding his coalition beyond his rabid supporters. He’ll need to attract a greater share of independen­t voters if he hopes to win a second term in the White House.

Republican­s should also consider Mr. Trump’s recent track record. With Mr. Trump as the face of the party, Republican­s lost scores of winnable races in 2018, 2020 and 2022. He is a one-man turnout machine for Democrats. It remains to be seen whether he will be able to maintain his political support as his legal troubles become front and center in the coming months.

Mr. Trump remains a risk for GOP voters. But if Republican­s want an alternativ­e, they will need to quickly coalesce around either Gov. Desantis or Ms. Haley, who have increasing­ly separated themselves from the rest of the field.

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