San Diego Union-Tribune

GOP DEBATE LARGELY STEERS CLEAR OF TRUMP

S.C.’s Haley heavily targeted by DeSantis and Ramaswamy

- BY BILL BARROW & JONATHAN J. COOPER Barrow and Cooper write for The Associated Press.

TUSCALOOSA, Ala.

Four Republican presidenti­al candidates were given several opportunit­ies Wednesday to criticize former President Donald Trump, who was absent from the debate again. But they mostly targeted each other, with former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley taking the brunt of the attacks as she gets more interest from donors and voters.

With just over a month before the 2024 primary calendar begins, the debate demonstrat­ed how firm Trump’s grip remains on the party.

But the focus on Haley reflected how other candidates perceive her as a threat to their chances of taking on Trump directly. Aside from former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, most of the candidates have spent more time in debates going after each other than taking aim at Trump, reflecting the view of many GOP operatives that there are diminishin­g returns in attacking the former president given his popularity among Republican­s.

The last scheduled debate before Iowa’s GOP caucuses on Jan. 15 may have limited impact on the race, airing on a lesser-known television network, NewsNation, from a state that Republican presidenti­al candidates have carried since 1980.

Trump remains dominant in national and earlystate polls. And after holding counterpro­gramming rallies during the first three debates, this time he instead went to a closed-door fundraiser. His campaign posted an ad during the debate focusing on President Joe Biden as both parties head toward a potential rematch of the 2020 election Trump lost.

Christie repeatedly tore into Trump on Wednesday and challenged Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis to answer directly if he believed Trump was fit or unfit to be president again. The crowd at the University of Alabama booed him at one point as he attacked Trump.

“His conduct is unacceptab­le. He’s unfit. And be careful of what you’re going to get,” warned Christie, who has been alone among leading Republican­s in his focus on the race’s clear front-runner.

“There is no bigger issue in this race than Donald Trump,” he said earlier.

DeSantis suggested

Trump, who is 77, is too old for the job. Asked repeatedly whether Trump is fit for the presidency, DeSantis did not directly say yes or no.

“Over a four-year period, it is not a job for someone that’s pushing 80,” DeSantis said. “We need someone who’s younger.”

Biotech entreprene­ur Vivek Ramaswamy again raised his hand as a candidate who would support Trump even if he were convicted of pending federal felonies, though he accused his other opponents of bowing to Trump for years to secure political posts or financial gain.

The closest the 38-yearold came to criticizin­g Trump was to call for a new generation of leadership.

Haley stood silently during the extended discussion, and neither the moderators nor her rivals asked for her opinion.

The debate’s brief focus on Trump was a reprieve for Haley, who spent most of the debate on the defensive.

DeSantis accused Haley of backing down from media criticism and Ramaswamy suggested she was too close to corporate interests as she gets new attention from donors.

He touted his own willingnes­s to pick high-profile fights with his critics and went after Haley just moments into the debate.

They also tussled over China, long an animating issue for conservati­ves worried about Beijing’s influence. Later in the debate, Haley credited Trump for taking a hard line with Beijing on trade but said he was too passive on other fronts, including allowing China to capture American technology for its own military use and purchase American farmland.

Interrupti­ng Haley, DeSantis accused her of allowing Chinese investment in South Carolina when she was governor and suggested her corporate donors would never allow her to be tough on Beijing.

“First of all, he’s mad because those Wall Street donors used to support him and now they support me,” Haley retorted before accusing DeSantis of being soft on Chinese investment in Florida.

Ramaswamy turned a foreign policy discussion into another attack on Haley, seemingly trolling her to name provinces in Ukraine and suggesting she does not understand the country. As he kept piling on, Christie stepped in to declare Haley “a smart, accomplish­ed woman” and dismiss Ramaswamy as “the most obnoxious blowhard in America.”

 ?? GERALD HERBERT AP ?? Chris Christie, Nikki Haley, Ron DeSantis and Vivek Ramaswamy participat­e in the debate Wednesday.
GERALD HERBERT AP Chris Christie, Nikki Haley, Ron DeSantis and Vivek Ramaswamy participat­e in the debate Wednesday.

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