Springfield News-Sun

Trump would empty the S.C. wallets Haley helped fill

- George Will writes for The Washington Post.

When Donald Trump won 20 of Iowa’s 40 nominating delegates — 20 of the 2,429 who will be allocated nationally; 20 of the 1,215 needed to nominate — he declared the game over. Enlarging his emotional repertoire — leavening a barrel of petulance with a pinch of synthetic magnanimit­y — he said it is “time now for everybody, our country, to come together.” Presumably, he was not inviting to this group hug those he calls “vermin.”

After winning less than 8% of Iowa’s registered Republican­s, he received less than five percentage points more than a majority in New Hampshire. There, flanked Tuesday night by grinning, ring-kissing, cringewort­hy toadies (Vivek Ramaswamy and Tim Scott, you are the sum of your choices), he declared the game over.

As the game enters the bottom of the first inning — 62 delegates allocated; 2,367 not yet — the nomination is his to lose. However, he, who despises “losers,” is one.

He, and the cult-cumparty under his tutelage, has lost the national popular vote twice, the presidency, the Senate and the House. And his party spectacula­rly underperfo­rmed in the 2022 elections.

Trump’s wisdom makes him flinch from debating Nikki Haley. Readers who did not see her combative, soaring Tuesday night speech can do so on Youtube. They will then recognize that his wisdom is a coward’s caution.

On Feb. 24, South Carolinian­s can extend the nomination process into the middle innings — into March, giving voters elsewhere time to consider the following.

Trump’s inversion of conservati­sm is complete. His prospectiv­e program features higher taxes at home and retreat abroad.

To be fair to him, it is simply beyond his poor powers of comprehens­ion to understand that tariffs — he vows 10% on all imports from everywhere

— are taxes paid by American consumers and producers. So, to a nation furious about inflation, he promises to raise the cost of living.

A reelected Trump could keep this promise because Congress has abandoned to presidents its constituti­onal power to “regulate commerce with foreign nations” (Article I, Section 8).

The Port of Charleston is one reason South Carolina’s population is burgeoning. And one reason South Carolina has changed more, and more for the better, in the past 50 years than any other state. Upward of 400,000 South Carolinian­s have arrived since Haley left the governorsh­ip in January 2017, and the state was the country’s fastest-growing by percentage in 2023.

Haley — like some other South Carolina governors, but she more than any other — has made her state an economic dynamo, where unemployme­nt is 3%. Trump, whose understand­ing of wealth creation is, like his wealth, wildly exaggerate­d, will dump sand in the dynamo’s gears.

In foreign policy,

Trump, a leader obedient to his base, promises to ensure that Ukraine loses the war he was sure would not occur. (In 2016, of Vladimir Putin: “He’s not going into Ukraine, OK? … You can mark it down. You can put it down. You can take it anywhere you want.”) Trump, obsessing about the cost of U.S. assistance (a rounding error on the U.S. budget), is oblivious that almost 90% of U.S. dollars devoted to arming Ukraine are spent in the United States. His blinkered parsimony is ludicrous from someone who presided over an $8.4 trillion increase in the national debt.

South Carolinian­s should contemplat­e the deluge of measures likely if Trump, who has never had and never will have 50% approval, is a lame duck president in 2026, when Republican­s will be defending 20 Senate seats, Democrats only 13. A Democratic Senate majority’s agenda in 2027 might include ending the filibuster, packing the Supreme Court, institutin­g card-check procedures to vitiate unionizati­on elections (and the South’s attraction of investment­s), and much more.

Haley’s gallant “game on” message Tuesday might ultimately be unavailing. She is, however, standing alone against Trump possibly becoming the most valuable president progressiv­ism has ever had.

 ?? ?? George Will
George Will

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