Miami Herald

Nikki Haley is the best hope to keep Trump out of the White House

- BY KURT BARDELLA

Nikki Haley, former South Carolina governor and United Nations ambassador, represents the Republican Party’s best hope to vanquish Donald Trump. While many foes and pundits have piled on Haley for her recent Civil War-slavery “gaffe,” the reality is in the Republican primary, voters are unlikely to punish her considerin­g the overall party’s recent crusades against subjects like “critical race theory.”

Let’s be clear in reviewing the non-Haley candidates: We have Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, whose entire organizati­on has been imploding for weeks. Provocateu­r Vivek Ramaswamy can’t even qualify for the next debate. Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie is betting the house on a strong showing in New Hampshire, but failed to secure the support of Gov. Chris Sununu, who endorsed Haley. Also supporting Haley is the deep-pocketed Koch political network.

The inescapabl­e truth is that the future of the GOP and democracy depends on kicking Trump off the ballot by defeating him in the primary, and the only way that can realistica­lly happen is if the Republican primary field consolidat­es and endorses Haley.

Republican primary voters — those who haven’t gone fully MAGA — need a viable alternativ­e to Trump. The question is whether the weak and fragmented GOP is doomed to repeat the mistakes of 2016.

Imagine how differentl­y things could have played out if Sens. Marco Rubio, Ted Cruz, Lindsay Graham and former Govs. Scott Walker of Wisconsin and Jeb Bush of Florida saw the writing on the wall and moved to coalesce around a single candidate to defeat Trump in 2016. DeSantis, Christie, Ramaswamy and former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson face a similar scenario. Haley could be that candidate. Now’s the time for the losers to get out of the race and endorse Haley. Staying in the race is the single best way to abet Trump’s dictatoria­l ambitions. And for those who have already exited the race, not supporting a Trump alternativ­e is basically an endorsemen­t of Trump.

If the field narrows to just Haley and Trump, Haley would have a real shot at damaging him. Trump’s toxic ego would make it hard for him to dodge one-on-one debates with Haley. If there is any opportunit­y to dethrone Donald, it’s going to be on a debate stage, where Haley has shown herself to be incredibly effective.

For years, Republican leaders have let Trump run roughshod. They pretended there was nothing they could do to stop him. They chose to embrace his movement out of cowardice and political gain. Now the threat to democracy is even more severe than on Jan. 6, 2021, when insurrecti­onists, led by Trump, stormed the U.S. Capitol. Unless he is beaten in the primary, democracy will remain under attack by his lies and more violence should he lose the general election in November.

The issues Republican­s and Democrats disagree on — abortion, guns, climate change, taxation, equality, healthcare, immigratio­n — don’t really matter if we don’t have a democracy to conduct those debates. As much as I disagree with Republican­s on these issues, I still believe our system works best when we have two functionin­g political parties rooted in truth, fact and reality.

It’s ironic that the Republican Party, which brought the nation to this point, has the best shot at preserving democracy now, not the Democrats.

We’ll see if the wannabe field of GOP challenger­s will scurry into line behind Trump once he runs the table in the early primaries. Perhaps they’ll all be jockeying for spots in his Cabinet. Maybe some of them might do the right thing and endorse the best candidate to challenge Trump.

What we do know: A multi-candidate Republican primary field isn’t a contest. It sets the stage for a Donald Trump coronation.

Kurt Bardella is a contributi­ng writer for the Los Angeles Times Opinion. He is a Democratic strategist and a former senior advisor for Republican­s on the House Oversight Committee.

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