Nikki Haley

Morning Joe points out alarming trend for Trump after South Carolina win

Kicking off Monday morning after Donald Trump won the South Carolina Republican presidential primary, "Morning Joe" co-host Joe Scarborough disabused the former president of any notion that it was the overwhelming victory that he seems to think it was.

Noting that the GOP frontrunner lost 40 percent of the vote to his opponent, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, the MSNBC host claimed that it was not a good showing for a former president.

Added to that, while reading from a Wall Street Journal editorial about Trump's underwhelming win, he pointed to an alarming trend so far for Trump.

As he put it, Trump "always underperforms."

"A couple weeks ago, [in] New Hampshire, 'Donald Trump routs,' you know, we're hearing Trump will win by 30 to 35 points in South Carolina. How long did we hear that? Heard he was going to win by 30 points for forever again. He always underperforms as far as margin of victory in the polls, always does. Yet, this was supposed to be a 30-point win. It ended up being a 20-point win," he began.

ALSO READ: 11 ways Trump doesn't become president

"That's not the issue here for Donald Trump. If you're inside his campaign, what you're concerned about are what I would be concerned about," he continued. "I don't want to speak for them but what I'd be concerned about is, she won 40 percent of the vote. Here we go. Fox News voter analysis found that 59 percent of her voters, 59 percent, said they would not vote for Donald Trump if he's the GOP nominee. 36 percent of all South Carolina Republican voters said a conviction in just one of his criminal trials would make him unfit to be president."

"That is something the Trump campaign is going to have to focus on between here and the end of the year," he added.

Watch below the video below or at this link.

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GOP strategist flags 'the single most important factor in ensuring Trump's defeat'

A GOP strategist on Sunday explained what he thinks is "the single most important factor in ensuring Trump's defeat."

Mike Madrid, who served as the Golden State's GOP political director before co-founding the group of current and former anti-Trump Republicans known as the Lincoln Project, encouraged Nikki Haley to stay in the GOP primary race to weaken the ex-president. The Lincoln project also recently trolled Trump at CPAC using an artificial intelligence ad that mimics his disappointed dad.

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'Bad news for Lara Trump': Columnist says RNC plans won't solve father-in-law's legal debt

Donald Trump's daughter-in-law, Lara Trump, has said she hopes to take over the Republican National Committee and steer its funds to paying off the former president's legal bills. But that plan is likely to make things worse for the struggling party, according to one columnist.

Trump has endorsed Eric Trump's wife, Lara, to co-run the RNC, and she has made it clear that she is 100% loyal to the ex-president and that she will "make sure that every penny is used properly." The problem with that is that the reason RNC fundraising is low in the first place is because of Trump's legal bills, according to Vanity Fair columnist Molly Jong-Fast's piece published by MSNBC.

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Haley soldiers on despite growing inevitability of Trump

CHARLESTON, S.C. — Is it political strategy, donor pressure or perhaps hubris? Nikki Haley is vowing "the fight goes on" against Donald Trump, positioning herself as a viable option in case the scandal-plagued Republican frontrunner's campaign implodes.

Haley has gone zero for four in early contests for the Republican presidential nomination, including an embarrassing 20-point drubbing Saturday in her home state of South Carolina where she served as governor.

Trump's 'rambling and incoherent' South Carolina victory speech leads to new questions

Donald Trump's victory speech in South Carolina after winning the Republican Party presidential primary drew a mixture of laughter and stunned reactions on MSNBC Saturday night that led to more questions about his fitness to not only be re-elected but also to run for the presidency a third time.

As members of the panel noted, the former president went to great lengths to thank his family members and their spouses but made a glaring omission by forgetting his son Eric Trump and his wife Lara whom he has endorsed to become co-chair of the RNC.

Asked for comment about the whole affair, MSNBC host Rachel Maddow pointed to the 'incoherence" of the speech — where the former president also misidentified the supporters standing behind him — and said his speech was the kind of "schtick" the public has become accustomed to.

"There is all of the weirdness of it, " she told her co-hosts before issuing an exasperated, "What are you talking about!?"

ALSO READ: 11 ways Trump doesn't become president

Calling Trump "Uncle ramble standers, " she continued, "Trump is rambling and incoherent even when he is at his best early in the evening."

Continuing in that vein, she explained, "And tonight, getting that little slice of it is a real reminder again of [Republican] Nikki Haley's message. Nikki Haley is saying both Trump and Biden are both unfit and you should pick me instead."

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'Bad news for Trump' despite South Carolina primary win: analysts

Despite an overwhelming win by Donald Trump in Saturday's South Carolina Republican presidential primary, there are dark clouds on the horizon for him after former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley (R) promised to continue her uphill campaign.

According to analysts from both Politico and the Wall Street Journal, the fact that Trump lost close to 40 percent of the vote is a red flag that he still has not convinced a substantial number of conservative voters to back his bid despite being an overwhelming favorite to be on the ballot in November.

Add to that, suggested the Wall Street Journal's Catherine Lucey, Haley's decision to stay the course gives her the opportunity to keep reminding some wavering voters why they don't want a return to the chaos that accompanies the former president.

According to Politico, there is "one big warning sign for Trump," with analysts pointing to the 40 percent that failed to fall in line with the Republican frontrunner.

ALSO READ: 11 ways Trump doesn't become president

"That number itself isn’t a problem in a primary. But it includes some serious reasons for concern in a general election. Trump lost moderate and liberal voters to Haley by a wide margin, according to exit polls. And, according to AP VoteCast, a bit over 1 in 5 GOP primary voters said they would not vote for Trump in November if he was the party’s nominee," the report states.

"...the clearest illustration of this dynamic came in the city of Charleston, where Haley racked up more than 80 percent of the vote in some precincts," the report added.

Appearing on CNN on Sunday morning with host Victor Blackwell, who stated there was "bad news for Trump" in the results, the Journal's Lucey agreed that the former president has some work to do and it may be an impossible task.

"I think this is a really interesting thing to think about when you look to the general and if you assume that Trump is obviously the likely general election candidate for Republicans, Haley is picking up a lot of support still," she told the host.

"I think one area to look at in particular is her appeal to moderate and suburban women who, as we know, can be a key voting block in deciding a general election," she continued. "And what she's doing right now in South Carolina and what is going we continue to do in Super Tuesday states is reminding those voters of what they don't like about Donald."

"So that is a real issue for him going forward," she pointed out. "She's out there really sending a message to those people about his policies, about his rhetoric and that could create issues for him going forward."

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Trump predicts ‘losing World War III’ if he is not elected in 2024

Former President Donald Trump painted a bleak picture Saturday of what would happen to the United States should voters reelect Joe Biden to the Oval Office in November.

The front-runner in the 2024 GOP presidential primary, who made similar predictions ahead of the 2020 presidential election, told attendees at the Conservative Political Action Conference — known as CPAC — just outside Washington, D.C., that only he could provide America a better outcome.

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Top takeaways from the South Carolina primary

CHARLESTON, S.C. — Former President Donald Trump eased to victory in South Carolina, dismissing Nikki Haley and closing in on the Republican nomination as he seeks a second term in the White House.

Here are five takeaways from Saturday night:

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'What about Eric?' Trump appears to forget one of his kids during victory speech

Donald Trump beat Nikki Haley in South Carolina's GOP primary on Saturday, but it was his victory speech that was the talk of the town.

The former president's speech stood out to many political onlookers at first because of his introduction of Lindsey Graham, a U.S. senator from the state who was relentlessly booed by the crowd of Trump's own supporters. Trump repeatedly tried to get the crowd to quiet down, but they just kept booing. There was no obvious reason for this, other than perhaps that Trump had said Graham was further to the "left" than him on most political issues.

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Lindsey Graham booed 'relentlessly' as Trump introduces him at S.C. victory speech

Donald Trump says he's a big fan of GOP Senator Lindsey Graham, but the ex-president's supporters don't appear to feel the same way.

Trump handily defeated Nikki Haley in the GOP primary in South Carolina on Saturday, spurring the former president to give a victory speech in the state. Among those he thanked at the event was Graham, a U.S. Senator from the state.

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'Hold on': Trump voter stumped when asked what he'd do if ex-president is convicted

A man who voted for Donald Trump in Saturday's GOP primary in South Carolina didn't know how to answer when he was asked who he'd vote for in the event the former president is convicted of a crime before the general election.

A CNN reporter interviewed a man identified as "Max," who said he voted for Nikki Haley to be governor of South Carolina, but voted for Trump over her as president. When asked by the news outlet about his reasoning, Max suggested Trump had proven he was up to the job by actually having been president.

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Donald Trump declared winner of South Carolina GOP primary over Nikki Haley

Donald Trump on Saturday was reportedly declared the winner of the GOP's South Carolina primary, where he faced his only opponent, his own former U.N. ambassador, Nikki Haley.

The former president faced off against Haley in a contest where he was expected to win by a large margin, despite the fact that Haley was the governor of that very state. He was ultimately able to pull off the primary win, according to CNN and the Associated Press reporting.

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A controversial dealmaker could save Arizona from Trump and Kari Lake: analysis

Centrist Sen. Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, a former Democrat turned independent, has yet to say whether or not she is seeking reelection in Arizona's 2024 U.S. Senate race. If she runs, Arizona could see a three-way competition between Sinema and the major parties' likely nominees: far-right MAGA Republican and conspiracy theorist Kari Lake and liberal Democratic Rep. Ruben Gallego.

In an article published by the conservative website The Bulwark on February 20, A.B. Stoddard argues that in order to save Arizona from Lake, Sinema should retire from the U.S. Senate and not seek a second term.

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