Current:Home > MarketsTakeaways from South Carolina primary: Donald Trump’s Republican home field advantage is everywhere-Angel Dreamer Wealth Society D1 Reviews & Insights
Takeaways from South Carolina primary: Donald Trump’s Republican home field advantage is everywhere
View Date:2025-01-11 13:17:37
NEW YORK (AP) — Donald Trump trounced Nikki Haley on Saturday in the South Carolina primary, a victory that emphatically punctuated the depth and breadth of his support among Republican primary voters as he vanquished his lone remaining major opponent in her home state.
Trump did not even have to mount a vigorous campaign, making few appearances and spending relatively little money. Haley has vowed to stay in the race and planned to visit Michigan, the site of the next primary, on Sunday. But the loss further eroded the rationale for her candidacy, barring something unforeseen that would derail the former president.
Here are some takeaways from the South Carolina leg of the campaign:
ALL (REPUBLICAN) POLITICS IS NATIONAL
Haley talked up her chances in “my sweet state of South Carolina” for months. Twice elected governor, initially as a tea party candidate in 2010, she was universally known in her state, and mostly for positive reasons. She had even served as Trump’s ambassador to the United Nations. Her conservative record was clear.
And yet her credentials were no match for Trump’s hold on the party.
Trump has now won with ease in the Midwest, the Northeast and the South, bulldozing any regional differences that had existed in the party before his rise.
Haley talked in 2024 about her successes recruiting industry to South Carolina and signing tax cuts and voter ID laws. She promoted her international experience. She excoriated Trump as too risky, too old, too busy fending off indictments, too close to Vladimir Putin and not close enough to NATO allies. Voters were not swayed.
AP VoteCast data reflected her challenge, especially on foreign policy. The survey found that about half of South Carolina primary voters wanted the U.S. to take a less active role in the world, while about 6 out of 10 opposed continuing aid to Ukraine in its defense against the Russian invasion. They were instead strongly aligned with Trump’s vision.
Everything Haley tried reinforced the dynamics: To most Trump loyalists she sounded like just another politician offering establishment positions and trying to topple their champion.
HALEY STILL HAS NO OBVIOUS OR EVEN LIKELY WINS
Haley repeated that she plans to stick around. The Michigan primary is Feb. 27. Haley already has campaigned there and run advertising. The big prize follows, Super Tuesday on March 5, when about a third of Republicans’ 2,429 total delegates are at stake across primaries and caucuses in 15 states and one territory. Haley’s campaign manager, Betsy Ankney, notes often that many states that follow South Carolina have the same open primary rules. But not all of them. And that didn’t translate into a win at home anyway.
California, a majority-Democratic state, does not have open primaries. So Trump, even in a state where he’s not broadly popular, will be the favorite in a Republicans-only setting. Michigan does have an open primary. But that’s a state where progressives and Arab American voters are pushing voters to cast “uncommitted” ballots as a protest against President Joe Biden’s approach to the Israel-Hamas war. Biden’s campaign is countering. So that gives Democrats their own fight, with no incentive to cross over.
In short, if Haley couldn’t win in South Carolina, her chances of victories ahead are slim.
WHAT REALLY FORCES CANDIDATES TO DROP OUT
Presidential campaigns rarely end directly because of primary losses and delegates counts. They end when a candidate can’t keep the lights on anymore. And sometimes donors keep giving long after the scoreboard says it’s practically over.
Often, that’s the case when there is a real ideological fight within a party — see Bernie Sanders in 2016, when the democratic socialist was the vessel for progressive anger at Hillary Clinton and the Democratic Party old guard. This time, for Republicans, it is a blend of personality, identity and ideology. Haley is the stand-in for all Republican check writers who loathe Trump and his version of the GOP.
And it’s these anti-Trump Republicans who keep paying her campaign’s bills. It isn’t about delegates. So when Haley insists she is staying through to Super Tuesday, it’s because she has the resources to do so. At some point, if she doesn’t have a dramatic reversal, those resources will dry up.
But this campaign has a major asterisk. Trump is facing more than 90 criminal charges in multiple jurisdictions, injecting unparalleled uncertainty into the race.
SPEECHES AND SPIN ASIDE, IT’S ABOUT DELEGATES
Haley’s determination aside, the ultimate numbers that matter are not on her fundraising reports. It’s the delegate math. And Trump was on pace to win all 50 delegates in South Carolina, widening his lead and making it increasingly clear that he will reach the 1,215-delegate majority long before the end of the primary calendar in late spring.
VP AUDITION HOUR, FEATURING SEN. TIM SCOTT
South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, who dropped his own presidential bid in November, enjoyed an extended spotlight in the unofficial contest to become Trump’s running mate. First appointed to the Senate in 2012 by Haley, he was Trump’s most visible surrogate in South Carolina, often heaping praise on a former president who can never seem to get too much validation.
Trump certainly noticed.
“He’s been such a great advocate,” Trump said at a Fox News town hall with Scott beside him. “He has been much better for me than he was for himself. I watched his campaign and he doesn’t like talking about himself, but boy, does he talk about Trump.”
Scott would give Trump loyalty and effective advocacy, without upstaging a former president who is always the headliner. Scott, as the only Black Republican in the Senate, also could appeal to Trump in his quest to increase GOP support from non-white voters.
But Trump has been known to flatter those who fawn over him, then make another choice.
THE BIDEN COALITION DID NOT SAVE HALEY
Haley never explicitly asked Democrats to help her against Trump, but she might as well have. She often reminded South Carolinians, who do not have to register by party, that the primary was open to all voters except the 125,000-plus who already had cast Democratic primary ballots Feb. 3.
She needed some of the remaining South Carolina Democrats, plus independents, to essentially give her a GOP version of the coalition Biden assembled against Trump in 2020. In a South Carolina Republican primary that would mean heavy support from wealthier, more moderate, college-educated white voters, especially around Columbia and Charleston. But Haley also needed at least some backing from Black voters in those areas and across small-town South Carolina.
It didn’t happen.
veryGood! (81)
Related
- She's a trans actress and 'a warrior.' Now, this 'Emilia Pérez' star could make history.
- Fantasy football defense/special teams rankings for Week 2: Beware the Cowboys
- Horoscopes Today, September 10, 2024
- Hawaii voters asked to ensure protection of same-sex marriage
- Chris Pratt and Katherine Schwarzenegger welcome their first son together
- New Jersey Pinelands forest fire is mostly contained, official says
- Mega Millions winning numbers for massive $800 million jackpot on September 10
- Hawaii voters asked to ensure protection of same-sex marriage
- Texas man accused of supporting ISIS charged in federal court
- Prison guard shortfall makes it harder for inmates to get reprieve from extreme heat, critics say
Ranking
- Jax Taylor Breaks Silence on Brittany Cartwright Dating His Friend Amid Their Divorce
- America's Got Talent‘s Grace VanderWaal Risks Wardrobe Malfunction in Backless Look at TIFF
- When do the 2024 WNBA playoffs begin? A look at the format, seedings
- TikToker Caleb Graves, 35, Shared Haunting Video Before Dying at Disney Half-Marathon
- Man waives jury trial in killing of Georgia nursing student
- New bodycam video shows police interviewing Apalachee school shooting suspect, father
- Massachusetts man who played same lottery numbers for 20 years finally wins Mega Millions
- Election officials warn that widespread problems with the US mail system could disrupt voting
Recommendation
-
Justice Department sues to block UnitedHealth Group’s $3.3 billion purchase of Amedisys
-
US commemorates 9/11 attacks with victims in focus, but politics in view
-
A Philadelphia officer has died of his injuries from a June shooting
-
Trump repeats false claims over 2020 election loss, deflects responsibility for Jan. 6
-
Trump on Day 1: Begin deportation push, pardon Jan. 6 rioters and make his criminal cases vanish
-
Local Republican official in Michigan promises to certify election results after being sued
-
Ex-CIA officer who spied for China faces prison time -- and a lifetime of polygraph tests
-
Local Republican official in Michigan promises to certify election results after being sued