Donald Trump Jr. Speaks About 3rd-Party Haley Speculation
CHARLESTON, S.C.—After speaking at the Citadel on Feb. 23, one day before South Carolina’s Republican presidential primary, Donald Trump, Jr. told The Epoch Times what he thinks of speculation surrounding former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley’s appearing on a third-party ticket.
While Ms. Haley has denied talking to representatives of “No Labels,” the political movement that has aimed to run an alternative to President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump, some speculate that she may be gearing up for a No Labels run.
“I don’t know that I believe anything that Nikki Haley says at this point. She said she wasn’t gonna run, right?” Mr. Trump, Jr. told The Epoch Times.
Yet, Mr. Trump, Jr. dismissed the significance of Ms. Haley’s presence in the race. His father is expected to score a strong victory in the state once led by his competitor.
“I don’t know that she changes all that much… I do understand that she’s there as a cudgel against Trump,” he said.
—Nathan Worcester
Gov. Noem Highlights South Dakota Successes Amid VP Chatter
“If America wants to be great again, I’d suggest you take a look at South Dakota and see all that we have achieved, and then vote for President Trump,” South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem told the CPAC audience,
As one of the favorite rumored picks to be former President Donald Trump’s choice for vice president, she gave her audience a look back at the governing style of the first-ever female governor of the Mount Rushmore state, and a pro-business one at that.
“I never mandated anything to my people,” she said, referring to the COVID-19 pandemic. “I never told anyone that they couldn’t go to church. We were the only state to turn down the elevated unemployment benefits because our people wanted to work. We trusted each other, and we got through our challenges together. And we are stronger because of it today.
“South Dakota is thriving because of the decisions that we’ve made in South Dakota.”
Her other accomplishments included a record 1.8 percent state unemployment rate, maintaining a standard of living with no income tax, no personal property tax, and a historic sales tax cut down to 4.2 percent.
Infrastructure improvements–from roads and bridges to expanding high-speed internet across the state–were also implemented.
“Now we are one of the few states whose suicide rates and mental health challenges are going down,” she said. “And we have the lowest drop in overdoses the last couple of years as well.”
She also touted that her state has the highest birth rate in the nation.
“People have hope,” she said. “People are having babies, and I love it.”
The audience cheered as Ms. Noem listed a number of firsts for her state. She said South Dakota was the first to pass resolutions and send the National Guard to Texas to assist in securing the border, the first state to veto the federal government’s attempt to create a central bank digital currency, and the first state to ban the Chinese-owned app TikTok.
But, despite her record of successes, she said she did not see a point in throwing her hat in the ring for president, as she knew that nobody could beat President Trump.
“I have always believed and supported the fact that our next president needs to be President Trump,” she said.
–T.J. Muscaro
Donald Trump, Jr. Speaks for Father in Charleston
S.C. Rep. Bishop: Trump Embodies America’s Fighting Spirit
Former President Donald Trump’s determination to fight for America is the reason that voters support him as they do, Rep. Dan Bishop (R-N.C.) told reporters Friday.
“The essence of Donald Trump is that he fights, and Americans embrace that,” Mr. Bishop said at CPAC in Washington.
President Trump, he said, has been a lone figure standing in opposition to globalism and the capture of American institutions by “a handful of oligarchs” who want to rule over everyone else.
“He stands for the proposition [that] we’ll restore America as the constitutional republic it’s intended to be, and I support that fully.”
The lawmaker added that Congress still has some work to do on that front.
President Trump is currently fighting multiple legal battles in relation to the Jan. 6, 2021, breach of the U.S. Capitol. In Colorado, the state Supreme Court has ruled him ineligible to appear on the GOP presidential primary ballot, holding that he is constitutionally barred for having “engaged in insurrection” against the United States.
But Mr. Bishop said he expects that ruling to be overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court.
“When you see the Supreme Court asking questions about that, it’s very clear the Supreme Court’s going to reverse that 9-0,” he said.
At a Feb. 8 hearing, a majority of the Supreme Court justices appeared skeptical of claims that the 14th Amendment empowers states to strike national candidates from the ballot. The court has yet to return a decision on the matter.
President Trump is slated to speak at CPAC on Saturday at 1 p.m.
—Jackson Richman, Samantha Flom
Florida Rep. Cory Mills: Gun Laws Are Intended to ‘Weaken the American People’
Rep. Cory Mills (R-Fla.) shed light on what he sees as the true intention of gun laws in the United States.
“This is not about policing,” he told the CPAC audience. “This is about politics. They are trying to do everything they can to weaken the American people to make us dependent upon the administrative state.”
His response came after Newsmax host Carl Higbie brought up that 68 percent of law enforcement officers in Connecticut refused to enforce an assault weapons ban passed by the state government.
“They thought they could just tax us and charge all of these frivolous payments out of gun ownership,” Mr. Mills said. And then there are the red flag laws, which are “unconstitutional in [their] entirety.”
Everyone in these blue states is talking about having the highest gun regulations, he said. But do you know what else they have? The highest levels of criminality and murderers per capita.
The lawmaker also took aim at “the fake media” for its assistance to the administrative state.
“They don’t want to vilify the actual criminal; they want to criminalize our actual ability to hold arms,” he said. “There is a weaponization effort to try and control the narrative, and we have to stop being the silent majority and be more vocal.”
–T.J. Muscaro
Haley Campaign, Acknowledging Odds, Doubles Down Anyway
Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley recognizes the long odds of her becoming the Republican presidential nominee. But those odds won’t stop her from running, her campaign manager said Friday.
“As we look to the path ahead, we know that this is an uphill battle. We know that the road is difficult, and we know that the math is challenging, but this has never just been about who can win a Republican primary. This battle is about who can win in November, defeat the Democrats, and finally get our country back on track,” Betsy Ankeny said on a call with reporters.
“We know the odds here, but we also know the stakes, and we think that a whole lot of Republicans across the country do too. And so, we are placing our faith in the American people,” she said.
Going down the list of recent GOP disappointments at the ballot box, Ms. Ankeny said that those who believe former President Donald Trump can beat President Joe Biden are in denial.
“2022 was the first midterm election since 1934 in which the incumbent president’s party, the Democrats, did not lose a single state legislative chamber or incumbent senator. And we all just saw what happened this month when Republicans lost a special election to replace the illustrious Republican George Santos in New York,” she stated.
“History and the polls show that Trump cannot win. And thinking that Trump can somehow cobble together the winning coalition that propelled him to victory in 2016 against an enfeebled Joe Biden is just a pipe dream.”
When asked by The Epoch Times for the campaign’s response to claims that Ms. Haley has no path to securing the nomination, Ms. Ankeny reiterated that the real question is who can win in November.
“This is about winning a general election,” she said. “How is Trump going to win a general election when all the polls and all the history and all the antics indicate that he clearly cannot? So again, we know the odds here, but this is about winning a general election, and that’s what we’re focused on.”
Ms. Ankeny was also pressed on whether there would be any scenario coming out of South Carolina in which Ms. Haley would consider dropping out of the race. She replied that the campaign has never discussed any such benchmarks and “won’t start now.”
“She made very clear in her speech on Tuesday that we are marching on, and that’s what we intend to do.”
To prove it, the campaign has launched an ad buy in Michigan, which holds its primary on Feb. 27. A seven-figure cable and digital ad buy has also been scheduled to run nationally in the lead-up to Super Tuesday on March 5.
–Jackson Richman, Samantha Flom
CPAC-Goers Want Secure Borders, Return to Domestic Manufacturing
The first thing Stephen Robinson wants former President Donald Trump to do when reclaims the presidency is secure the southern border.
“The first policy I’d like him to do is finish the wall—and I’ve offered to help with that,” the CPAC attendee told The Epoch Times.
Mr. Robinson, an engineer, said he had offered his services to Tom Homan, who served as acting director of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement under President Trump.
“I’m happy to help the country,” he said.
The border was also top of mind for Carol Zarkowski, another ardent supporter of the 45th president, as was manufacturing.
“I was raised when America was great, and I’ve seen it fall. And I would really like to see industry brought back to this country and blue-collar workers have jobs,” Ms. Zarkowski said.
“Why do we take our manufacturing to China?” she wondered, noting that the car model she recently purchased will soon be made in China.
“And it’s going to be electric as well, which I don’t want electric car,” she said. “We should be using our gas and oil that we can get right here in this country. I don’t like all of our things moved to other countries. I feel that America should be doing our own manufacturing.”
Under President Trump, she said, manufacturing began to return to the U.S. thanks to the tariffs he implemented on imported products. But now, under President Joe Biden, companies have shifted back toward outsourcing their operations.
“And [President Biden] encourages that. Trump does not. Trump believes in America, and I believe in America. That’s why I support him so much.”
—Jackson Richman and Samantha Flom
South Carolinians Hear Final Pitches From Trump, Haley
As the eyes of Republicans across the U.S. turn toward South Carolina, former President Donald Trump and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley are making their final pitches to voters ahead of the state’s crucial presidential primary on Saturday.
Ms. Haley has two campaign stops planned for Friday. She’ll start by making an appearance at the Moncks Corner Train Depot in at 2 p.m. She’ll then make her way to Mount Pleasant for a 6 p.m. rally at the Patriots Point Naval and Maritime Museum.
Donald Trump Jr., meanwhile, will be stumping for his father in Charleston, where he has two events planned, including a 3:30 p.m. appearance at Team Trump’s South Carolina headquarters.
Later, the 45th president himself will serve as the keynote speaker at the Black Conservative Federation’s annual gala in Columbia. The ticketed event, set for 6 p.m., will feature a theme of “Restoring the American Dream.”
—Samantha Flom
What to Watch for at CPAC Today
The second day of the 2024 Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington will feature a star-studded lineup of conservative voices.
- 9:45 a.m.: “Government Gangster” with Kash Patel, former Pentagon chief of staff
- 1:10 p.m.: South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem
- 1:25 p.m.: “What You Talkin’ Bout Fani Willis?” with Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), chairman of the House Judiciary Committee
- 2:15 p.m.: “Burning Down the House” with Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.)
- 2:50 p.m.: Nigel Farage, former leader of the Brexit Party
- 3:35 p.m.: Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.), chair of the House Republican Conference
- 3:55 p.m.: “The Interview” with Sen. J.D. Vance (R-Ohio) and Newsmax host Robb Schmitt
- 4:20 p.m.: “The Better View” with Megyn Kelly, journalist and host of “The Megyn Kelly Show,” and CPAC Senior Fellow Mercedes Schlapp
- 7:30 p.m.: Ronald Reagan dinner, featuring entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy and Bishop Joseph Strickland
—Samantha Flom
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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