Trump vows to crush Haley as Republican race heads south
We will be coming like a freight train in November,”
when the general election will be held. Trump said.
Nikki Haley was a popular Governor of South Carolina for six years but Donald Trump has beaten her and smashed all her dreams of becoming the Vice President of America.
Donald Trump and Nikki Haley go head-to-head on February 24 in South Carolina’s Republican primary, with the ex-President expected to trounce his former charge in her home state as he closes in on the nomination.
“Tomorrow you will cast one of the most important votes of your entire life and — honestly — we’re not very worried about tomorrow,” a nonchalant Mr. Trump told an election-eve rally in the city of Rock Hill.
Polls in the southern U.S. state opened at 7:00 a.m. local time (1200 GMT). In a school near Charleston, about a dozen people came to cast votes in the first half hour.
South Carolinians do not have to indicate party allegiance when they register to vote, and are allowed to have their say in either the Democratic or the Republican primary.
Ms. Haley — a more traditional conservative who espouses limited government and a muscular foreign policy — will rely on votes from moderates, although the tactic did little for her as she lost to Trump in each of the first four nominating contests.
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