Las Vegas Sun

May 1, 2024

OPINION:

Warning signs for Trump, even in victory

With his solid New Hampshire victory, former President Donald Trump has the Republican nomination within his grasp. But the results showed he faces some big problems down the line.

Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley’s final push enabled her to outperform late polls, but she still lost to Trump by double digits. That raised doubts she could beat him elsewhere, though she vowed to press on.

“This race is far from over,” Haley said Tuesday night.

Though Trump took another big step toward his third consecutive GOP nomination, some aspects of the results illustrated his underlying problems, as did his reaction to them.

Unlike the gracious remarks about his rivals after last week’s resounding win in the Iowa caucuses — and perhaps unsettled by the fact that the outcome was closer than pre-primary polls — he began his comments by mocking Haley’s contention that she had “a great night.”

“She didn’t win,” he said. “She had a very bad night.” He noted he had the support of Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C. — standing behind him — though Haley had appointed him to the Senate. “You must really hate her,” Trump said. Replied the grinning Scott, “I just love you.”

Network exit polls showed continuing resistance to the GOP front-runner among moderate and independent suburban voters, who mostly backed Haley. Self-styled moderates voted for the former South Carolina governor by three to one, and most said they would be dissatisfied by a Trump nomination.

And nearly half the primary voters — including one-fourth of all Republicans — said they would regard Trump as unfit for the presidency if he were convicted of a crime. In Iowa, 31% of GOP voters expressed that concern in last week’s caucuses.

To some degree, the responses reflected the fact that the New Hampshire GOP electorate is less conservative than Iowa’s. But it also showed that concerns within his own party about the array of indictments facing him could become a significant factor in the general election — if he is convicted.

After all, given the likelihood of another close race in November, even a small drop-off in Trump’s Republican support could be fatal to his hopes. It’s one reason he is so eager to delay the various trials he faces until after the election.

And those voter concerns were underscored by a surprisingly candid analysis of the situation by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, just days after he suspended his own campaign and endorsed Trump.

“When I have people come up to me who voted for (former President Ronald) Reagan and have been conservative their whole life say they don’t want to vote for Trump again, that’s a problem,” DeSantis said in an interview with conservative radio host Steve Deace. He called it “a huge warning sign” for the GOP.

Still, by winning in both Iowa and New Hampshire, Trump became just the second Republican in a competitive race — and the fifth candidate overall — to sweep the first two contests. Ironically, though all went on to capture their party’s nominations, the only one to win the general election was Jimmy Carter in 1976.

The other Republican was former President Gerald Ford, who narrowly edged Reagan in New Hampshire in 1976 after winning easily in Iowa. But what happened after New Hampshire in that race may offer some encouragement for Haley to press ahead.

Ford won the next four primaries after New Hampshire, and Reagan’s candidacy hung by a thread when the GOP race reached North Carolina on March 23, 1976. But with the aid of Sen. Jesse Helms’ conservative machine, Reagan upset Ford, reenergizing his campaign and ensuring the race would continue to the Republican convention that August in Kansas City, Mo.

Ford ultimately beat Reagan by the narrowest of margins — 43 of the 2,259 delegates. But he lost to Carter in November, in part because Reagan gave him only lukewarm support, and the former movie star turned California governor won the presidency four years later.

Haley’s challenge seems far more overwhelming than Reagan’s. He was facing an unelected president who had never run a national campaign.

By contrast, she is facing the man who has dominated the GOP for the past eight years and has made two national races. And she has barely campaigned in upcoming states like Nevada and Michigan.

Meanwhile, it is becoming evident that even some Republicans who have been less than enthusiastic about Trump are eager to end the nominating race and get on with trying to unseat President Joe Biden.

But it may take at least one more defeat — in South Carolina — for the message to get through to Haley.

Carl Leubsdorf is the former Washington bureau chief of the Dallas Morning News.