Trump soundly defeats Nikki Haley in South
Carolina Republican primary
Result called for Trump almost immediately after polls
close as former South Carolina governor suffers stinging home-state loss
Lauren
Gambino and Joan E Greve in Charleston
Sun 25 Feb
2024 02.58 CET
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/feb/24/trump-haley-south-carolina-primary-results
Donald
Trump defeated Nikki Haley in her home state of South Carolina, a stinging
setback that narrows her vanishingly thin path to the nomination.
The
Associated Press called the South Carolina primary for Trump right when polls
closed at 7pm ET, in a clear indication of his large victory in Haley’s home
state.
Palmetto
State voters have a long history of choosing the party’s eventual nominee, and
Trump is on track to clinch the Republican nomination months before the party’s
summer convention in Milwaukee.
“I just
want to say that I have never seen the Republican party so unified as it is
right now,” Trump told supporters at his victory party in Columbia. “This is a
fantastic evening. It’s an early evening, and fantastic.”
Trump had
stormed through the early voting states, racking up wins – and delegates – in
Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada. Beating Haley, who served as his ambassador to
the United Nations, in her home state delivers another stinging blow to her
candidacy, moving the nomination even further out of her reach.
Addressing
supporters in Charleston, Haley insisted she would not drop out of the race
despite her four straight losses, arguing that Trump is unable to defeat Joe
Biden in the general election.
“What I saw
today was South Carolina’s frustration with our country’s direction. I’ve seen
that same frustration nationwide. I share it. I feel it to my core,” Haley
said. “I said earlier this week that no matter what happens in South Carolina,
I will continue to run for president. I’m a woman of my word.”
Haley’s
campaign announced on Friday it was launching a “seven-figure” national cable
and digital buy ahead of Super Tuesday on 5 March. On Sunday she will host a
rally in Michigan, which holds its primary on 27 February, before embarking on
a cross-country swing through several Super Tuesday states.
Her refusal
to be driven from the race has frustrated Trump and his allies. They say Haley,
who has compared herself to David taking on Goliath, has no path to victory,
and accuse her of relying on wealthy donors to keep her long-shot bid alive and
merely prolong the inevitable.
Steven
Cheung, a Trump campaign spokesperson, said on Saturday before polls closed:
“The fact is that Haley’s campaign has now turned into a full-fledged Never
Trump operation with her as Crooked Joe Biden’s biggest surrogate. The primary
ends tonight, and it is time to turn to the general election.”
But Haley’s
supporters say they are grateful for her presence in the race as a reminder of
what a future Republican party might look like. Some believe the 52-year-old
Haley is laying the groundwork for a future presidential run, or positioning
herself to be the obvious second choice in the extraordinary event Trump can no
longer serve as the party’s nominee.
Trump faces
91 felony charges as well as mounting legal fees and vast financial penalties
that he has tapped his campaign fund to help pay. At her events, Haley tells
voters that it is “not normal” for a candidate to spend more time in the
courtroom than on the campaign trail, or to ask donors to foot his legal bills.
But Trump’s
legal travails, which stem in part from his efforts to overturn the 2020
presidential election and his role in the 6 January assault on the US Capitol,
have only strengthened his support.
In recent
days, Trump’s campaign has already started to turn its attention toward the
general election contest against Biden, who is gliding to his party’s
nomination without a serious primary challenge. Trump’s team has moved
aggressively to take control of the Republican National Committee, which is
expected to remain neutral in the primary.
Trump began
his day in Washington, where he delivered a dark speech at the Conservative
Political Action Conference (CPAC) before returning to South Carolina to attend
an election-night watch party in the state capital, Columbia.
Earlier in
the day, Haley cast her ballot on Kiawah Island, her home precinct. Later, her
cross-state Beast of the Southeast bus tour rolled into Charleston, where she
spoke at an election-night watch party. In her remarks to supporters, Haley
framed her presence in the race as a democratic obligation.
“In the
next 10 days, another 21 states and territories will speak,” Haley said. “They
have the right to a real choice, not a Soviet-style election with only one
candidate. And I have a duty to give them that choice.”
Even as
Haley has vowed to stay in the primary race as long as possible, Trump has made
clear that he is already turning his attention to the general election. When he
addressed his supporters in Columbia, Trump predicted that his decisive victory
in South Carolina would soon be replicated in Michigan, which holds its primary
on Tuesday.
“Michigan’s
up. We’re going to have a tremendous success there. And then we have a thing
called Super Tuesday,” Trump said. “South Carolina, thank you very much. Go
home. Get rest. We have a lot of work ahead of us.”
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