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Tag: Tim Scott

  • Republicans move quickly to support Ashley Hinson’s Senate bid

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    Republicans are quickly falling in line behind Ashley Hinson, the Iowa representative running to replace Sen. Joni Ernst in the red-leaning state.

    Senate Majority Leader John Thune and National Republican Senatorial Committee Chair Tim Scott on Friday endorsed Hinson, who announced her campaign earlier this week.

    “Having traveled Iowa with Ashley, I know she is the fighter the Hawkeye State needs to deliver President [Donald] Trump’s agenda in 2026 and beyond,” Scott (R-S.C.) said in a statement. “Iowans are all-in for Ashley Hinson, and that’s why the NRSC and I are proud to stand with my friend, a proven conservative and staunch Trump ally.”

    Though Iowa is not one of the top pickup opportunities for Democrats this year, the party hopes it could be in play as Democrats need to net four seats to flip the Senate. Avoiding a competitive GOP primary could help stave off the opportunity for a Democratic pickup.

    In addition to Thune and Scott, Senate Leadership Fund — the super PAC linked to GOP leadership — also said it would be backing Hinson.

    Trump has yet to weigh in on the race, even as Hinson and other Senate Republicans look to closely tie the Iowa hopeful to the president.

    Hinson hopped in the race the same day Ernst, who served two terms in the Senate, announced she would retire. Hinson has been viewed as a potential Ernst successor, who despite indicating last year she would run for reelection has faced several setbacks in recent months.

    The former TV news anchor is a strong fundraiser and seen as a rising star in the party. She reported $2.8 million in her campaign coffers earlier in the year.

    “We need conservative fighters in the Senate — and that’s exactly what we’ll get with Ashley Hinson,” Thune said in a statement. “Ashley has been a fierce advocate of President Trump’s America First agenda and has been instrumental in delivering big wins in the House for Iowans and the American people.”

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  • Anger and anxiety loom over the Republican convention, but there is good news for Trump in court

    Anger and anxiety loom over the Republican convention, but there is good news for Trump in court

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    MILWAUKEE – Donald Trump’s campaign chiefs designed the Republican convention opening this week to feature a softer and more optimistic message, focusing on themes that would help a divisive leader expand his appeal among moderate voters and people of color.

    Then came the shooting that rattled the foundation of American politics.

    Suddenly, the Democrats’ turmoil after the debate, the GOP’s potential governing agenda and even Trump’s criminal convictions became secondary to concerns about political violence and the country’s stability. The presumptive Republican nominee and his allies will face the nation during their four-day convention in Milwaukee unquestionably united and ready to “fight,” as the bloodied Trump cried out Saturday while Secret Service agents at his Pennsylvania rally rushed him to safety.

    Anger and anxiety are coursing through the party, even as many top Republicans call for calm and a lowering of tensions.

    Vivek Ramaswamy, who ran in the GOP presidential primary, has distinguished himself as one of the more aggressive voices on the right, saying often that the country is already at war with itself. So it was notable that in remarks at an event run by the conservative Heritage Institute at the RNC on Monday he was toning down his rhetoric and urging the country to come together.

    “The enemy is not the Democrats, it is an ideology,” Ramaswamy told the crowd at Heritage’s “Policy Fest” event.

    GOP Sen. Steve Daines, the chair of the Senate Republicans’ campaign arm, said at a Politico event at the RNC on Monday that the party needs to focus on policy and not divisive politics in the aftermath of Saturday’s shooting.

    “This is a moment, as we say, that the temperature needs to be brought down,” the Montana lawmaker said. “What needs to be litigated for the American people in the next three and a half months should be more policy and not personalities.”

    On Monday, hours before the first convention session, some well-timed good news for Trump got the day off to a positive start for him and his party. The federal judge presiding over Trump’s classified documents case dismissed the prosecution because of concerns over the appointment of the prosecutor who brought the case, handing the former president a major court victory.

    Trump posted on his Truth Social platform to call for the dismissal of his other legal cases.

    “As we move forward in Uniting our Nation after the horrific events on Saturday, this dismissal of the Lawless Indictment in Florida should be just the first step, followed quickly by the dismissal of ALL the Witch Hunts,” he wrote, listing several cases.

    Meanwhile, Trump is expected to announce his vice presidential pick on the first day of the Republican National Convention, he said in an interview.

    It remains unclear whether the shooting Saturday at his Pennsylvania rally has changed the former president’s thinking about his potential second-in-command. But he told Fox News Channel host Bret Baier in a call that he planned to make his pick Monday.

    There are no changes yet to the convention program

    In an interview Sunday, Republican Party chairman Michael Whatley said the convention’s programming wouldn’t be changed after the shooting. The agenda, he said, will feature more than 100 speakers overwhelmingly focused on kitchen table issues and Trump’s plans to lift everyday working Americans.

    “We have to be able to lay out a vision for where we want to take this country,” he said.

    Whatley said the central message would have little to do with President Joe Biden’s political struggles, Trump’s grievances about the 2020 election or the ex-president’s promises to exact retribution against political enemies.

    “We are going to have the convention that we have been planning for the last 18 months,” he said. “We are a combination of relieved and grateful that the president is going to be here and is going to accept the nomination.”

    Beyond voting to formally give Trump the nomination, elected delegates from across the nation will update the GOP’s policy platform for the first time since 2016. The scaled-down platform proposal — just 16 pages with limited specifics on key issues, including abortion — reflects a desire by the Trump campaign to avoid giving Democrats more material on a key campaign issue.

    The platform approved by a committee last week doesn’t include an explicit call for a national abortion ban, two years after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade and ended a federally guaranteed right to abortion.

    “More divisiveness would not be healthy,” said Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council.

    As Trump prepares to announce his choice for vice president, his top three contenders are North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, Ohio Sen. JD Vance and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, all expected to speak this week.

    Despite a contentious primary season, any lingering tensions appear to have been set aside.

    Former rivals Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Nikki Haley, the former United Nations ambassador, are expected to speak at the convention on Trump’s behalf.

    People connected to Jan. 6 will be involved

    There will be reminders of Trump’s record in a speaking program that includes a handful of Republicans charged with crimes related to other political violence — the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol.

    Former White House trade adviser Peter Navarro, who’s in jail on contempt of Congress charges, is expected to speak at the convention just hours after his release. He was found guilty in September after refusing to cooperate with a congressional investigation into the Capitol attack.

    Nevada GOP Chair Michael McDonald, who was indicted of criminal charges related to his involvement in a scheme to present fake electors who would overturn Biden’s victory over Trump, plans to present the former president with the party nomination at the convention. A judge dismissed the case against McDonald last month over a venue dispute.

    Trump has repeatedly cast the people involved in efforts to overturn the 2020 election, including his many supporters who stormed the Capitol, as political prisoners.

    For now, Democrats have scaled back their plans to offer a competing message during the Republican convention.

    The Biden campaign over the weekend pulled down its campaign ads. Vice President Kamala Harris postponed a Tuesday appearance in Florida set to focus on Trump’s opposition to abortion rights. And the pro-Democratic group American Bridge is delaying the scheduled Monday release of faux trading cards designed to highlight controversial policy positions of Trump and other leading Republicans.

    There are expected to be protesters in Milwaukee

    The convention, coming less than four months before Election Day, is taking place in heavily Democratic Milwaukee, the largest city in a pivotal swing state Trump lost by less than 1 percentage point four years ago.

    Even before the assassination attempt, major protests were expected, although movement will be severely restricted as part of enhanced security precautions established by the Secret Service.

    Still, the risk of violent confrontation exists.

    Security officials previously announced that people just outside the Secret Service perimeter would be allowed to carry guns openly or concealed as permitted by state law. Wisconsin statutes outlaw only machine guns, short-barreled shotguns and silencers.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Christine Fernando reported from Chicago. AP writers Thomas Beaumont in Pewaukee, Wisconsin, and Ali Swenson in Minneapolis contributed.

    Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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    Steve Peoples And Jill Colvin, Associated Press

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  • Is 2024 Election Denialism a Trump VP Litmus Test?

    Is 2024 Election Denialism a Trump VP Litmus Test?

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    Tim Scott is clearly willing to do the Boss’s bidding if push comes to shove.
    Photo: Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images

    Typically, vice-presidential nominees complement the presidential nominee in some crucial respect; that was true for Donald Trump in 2016, when Mike Pence offered reassurance to the movement conservatives and conservative Evangelicals uneasy with the then-mogul and his unorthodox persona and outlook. But Pence, of course, by refusing to help Trump reverse the 2020 election results on January 6, 2021, also taught Trump the value of absolutely loyalty to the Boss. So it goes without saying that his next running-mate will be closely examined for any signs of incipient independence. That’s why the only 2024 Trump primary rival who is on his VP shortlist is Tim Scott. The South Carolina senator was careful not to criticize Trump as an active candidate and then endorsed him over Nikki Haley, the woman who appointed him to the U.S. Senate. Indeed, Scott’s situation provides a good measuring stick for the outer bounds of Trump’s tolerance for any risk of a recurrence of the Pence problem.

    Since 2020 election denialism is a central feature of Trump’s 2024 message, criticism of Trump’s (or his “patriot” friends’) conduct on January 6 could be a real problem for a prospective veep. Tim Scott provides a real borderline case: While expressing displeasure about the assault on the Capitol, and worse yet, voting to confirm Joe Biden’s election, he went out of his way to absolve Trump himself of any misconduct soon thereafter.

    “The president is simply not guilty,” Scott said on Fox News. “I was in the chamber when the rioters were coming over. I was taking my jacket off, my tie off, rolling my sleeves up, just in case I had to fight. The chances of me understanding and appreciating the severity of the situation is 100 percent. The one person I don’t blame is President Trump.”

    That’s pretty good from a MAGA perspective, though Scott may need to learn some respect for the “J6 hostages” if he wants to speak at Trump rallies this fall. January 6 revisionism aside, however, there’s a prospective topic where any equivocation could be really damaging to the team: leaving open the possibility of 2024 election denialism. And Scott faced and met an acid test over this last weekend as a guest on Meet the Press, as The Hill reported:

    In an interview on NBC News’s “Meet the Press,” anchor Kristen Welker pressed Scott on Trump’s refusal to commit to accepting the 2024 election results and then asked Scott whether he would commit to accepting the results.

    Scott repeatedly avoided answering the question — even when pressed at least three times for “just yes or no” on accepting the results of the election — and said, “at the end of the day, the 47th president of the United States will be President Donald Trump.”

    Welker followed up, asking, “Wait, wait, senator. Yes or no. Yes or no? Will you accept the election results of 2024, no matter who wins?”

    “That is my statement,” Scott replied, later adding, “The American people will make the decision, and the decision will be for President Trump.”

    Scott could have emulated Trump himself and responded to the question with a long, incoherent word salad that would have made it difficult for Welker to repeat the question and try to pin him down. But by clamming up once he’d predicted Trump’s ultimate triumph, the South Carolinian did what he had to do.

    Unfortunately for other veep prospects, Scott’s very conspicuous refusal to make a statement of trust in the electoral system that would have been entirely routine for any presidential or vice-presidential candidate prior to 2016 will guarantee they will face the same question sooner or later. And there’s really no acceptable answer other than “it depends,” which of course raises other questions that aren’t easy to answer. Perhaps the best VP prospect would be someone who never for a moment challenged Trump’s 2020 election denialism and is down for another round of it today. There aren’t a lot of those since nearly all Republican elected officials either admitted in an unguarded moment that Biden had won the election, or at the time found the events of January 6 stressful or grotesque. So those who want to see their names on a bumper sticker with Donald Trump this year had better be extra careful about foreclosing any election-stealing gambit by the former president between Election Day and next January 20.


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    Ed Kilgore

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  • ‘Chicken Fingers And Pudding Cups’: Trump Campaign Hammers Ron DeSantis Over Private Call Saying He Won’t Be VP

    ‘Chicken Fingers And Pudding Cups’: Trump Campaign Hammers Ron DeSantis Over Private Call Saying He Won’t Be VP

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    Opinion

    Screenshot: WYFF News 4

    The Donald Trump campaign put Florida Governor Ron DeSantis on blast after comments he made on a private call surfaced indicating that he had no interest in serving as Vice President.

    NBC News reported on the phone conversation with supporters in which DeSantis urged Trump to avoid “identity politics” in choosing a running mate while dismissing calls for him personally to join the ticket.

    “I would want somebody that, if something happened, the people that voted us in would have been pleased to know that they’re going to continue the mission,” DeSantis said.

    “I have heard that they’re looking more in identity politics. I think that’s a mistake,” he added. “I think you should just focus on who the best person for the job would be, and then do that accordingly.”

    That’s actually a reasonable concept and something Republicans have complained drives Democrats in their every decision – race and gender.

    RELATED: Trump Releases Wild New Campaign Ad Attacking ‘Pudding Fingers’ DeSantis

    DeSantis On Being Trump’s Veep: ‘I Am Not Doing That’

    According to the NBC report, DeSantis also squashed the idea of joining Trump’s campaign as his Vice President.

    “People were mentioning me. I am not doing that,” he said.

    DeSantis has long insisted that he would not join the Trump ticket even after leaving the presidential race. He also predicted that Trump would staff his White House with “yes men” who would do his bidding.

    “I think that how he staffs the White House, how he staffs the administration, will be really, really significant,” DeSantis said. “I think he likely is going to find people that are going to be more kind of yes men, rather than folks that are going to be pushing back.”

    RELATED: Donald Trump Teases Tim Scott As Running Mate

    Trump Campaign Fires Back

    To say the Trump campaign didn’t appreciate DeSantis’ comments would be a massive understatement.

    Campaign spokesperson Karoline Leavitt responded, “Ron DeSantis failed miserably in his presidential campaign and does not have a voice in selecting the next vice president of the United States.”

    “Rather than throw cheap shots from afar, Ron should focus on what he can do to fire [President] Joe Biden and Make America Great Again,” she added.

    Leavitt’s response was far more measured than that of one of Trump’s other aides, senior advisor Chris LaCivita.

    “Chicken fingers and pudding cups is what you will be remembered for you sad little man,” LaCivita wrote on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter.

    Daily Beast report from last year claimed that DeSantis had a peculiar eating habit regarding pudding.

    Two unnamed sources for the leftist tabloid claimed that once, four years ago, “DeSantis enjoyed a chocolate pudding dessert—by eating it with three of his fingers.”

    Trump’s campaign turned it into a bizarre political ad against the Florida governor.

    Trump has offered up a few names to his list of vice presidential candidates, including Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina, biotech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, Florida GOP Rep. Byron Donalds, and South Carolina Gov. Kristi Noem.

    He did, actually also include DeSantis on that list during a Fox News town hall event earlier this week.

    During the private call, DeSantis refused to rule out another run for the White House in 2028.

    “Oh, I haven’t ruled anything out,” he said. “I mean … we’re still in this election cycle. So it’s presumptuous to say, you know, this or that. I think a lot happens in politics.”

    Let’s hope that he learns from the mistakes that he and his inept campaign strategists made throughout this past year.

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  • 2/18: Face The Nation

    2/18: Face The Nation

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    2/18: Face The Nation – CBS News


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    This week on “Face the Nation,” former President Donald Trump faces yet another legal setback, and with the South Carolina Republican primary less than a week away, Nikki Haley is fighting for her home state. We’ll hear from both of South Carolina’s Republican senators — Tim Scott and Lindsey Graham — about their recent trip to the U.S.-Mexico border, and how the death of Putin critic Alexey Navalny will impact the push to aid Ukraine.

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  • Trump reveals criteria for running mate, name drops two top Republicans

    Trump reveals criteria for running mate, name drops two top Republicans

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    Former President Trump revealed his criteria for a running mate on Sunday, but he told Fox News host Maria Bartiromo that he won’t announce a vice presidential pick “for a little while.”

    Trump made the comments in an interview with Bartiromo that aired on “Sunday Morning Futures.” He said the most important factor is to ensure his running mate would be able to step up and handle the presidency in the case of an emergency.

    “What criteria are you using to identify who your running mate is?” Bartiromo asked.

    “Always it’s gotta be who is going to be a good president. Obviously you always have to think that, because in case of emergency. Things happen, right? No matter who you are, things happen. That’s gotta be number one,” Trump responded.

    TRUMP, RFK JR SIDE WITH TEXAS IN BORDER FIGHT WITH BIDEN ADMIN AS 25 STATES SHOW SUPPORT

    Former President Donald Trump in New Hampshire

    Former President Trump revealed his criteria for a running mate on Sunday, but he told Fox News host Maria Bartiromo that he won’t announce a vice presidential pick “for a little while.”

    “Who is your running mate?” Bartiromo pressed.

    READ ON THE FOX NEWS APP

    “Well, I have a lot of good people. I have a lot of good ideas,” he added, saying he “talks to everybody.”

    VOTERS SHARE TOP RUNNING MATE CHOICES FOR TRUMP IF ELECTED: ‘IT HAS TO BE SOMEONE YOUNGER’

    “You know, I called [South Carolina Sen.] Tim Scott and people like Tim Scott, and I said you’re a much better candidate for me than you are for yourself,” Trump said. “When I watched him, he was fine. He was good, but he was very low key.”

    Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina in New HampshireSen. Tim Scott of South Carolina in New Hampshire

    Trump says Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., is a better advocate for the Trump campaign than he was even for his own presidential campaign.

    “I watched him in the last week, defending me and sticking up for me and fighting for me – I said, man, you’re a much better person for me than you are for yourself,” he continued.

    Trump went on to praise South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem as well, noting that she said publicly that she would never run against him, “because I could never beat him.”

    TRUMP ASKS SUPREME COURT TO KEEP NAME ON COLORADO BALLOT

    Former President Donald TrumpFormer President Donald Trump

    Former President Donald Trump leaves the courtroom for a lunch break during his civil fraud trial at New York State Supreme Court on November 06, 2023 in New York City.

    Trump also denied reports that his campaign had reached out to Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., to explore a potential ticket with him early on in the campaign season. Trump said the interaction “never happened.”

    Original article source: Trump reveals criteria for running mate, name drops two top Republicans

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  • Whoopi Goldberg Launches Vile Attack On Tim Scott For Denying Systemic Racism – ‘Looney Tune’

    Whoopi Goldberg Launches Vile Attack On Tim Scott For Denying Systemic Racism – ‘Looney Tune’

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    Opinion

    Source: The View YouTube

    On Wednesday’s episode of the ABC talk show “The View,” co-host Whoopi Goldberg launched a truly vile attack on Senator Tim Scott (R-SC), branding him a “looney tune” for denying systemic racism.

    Goldberg Attacks Scott

    Goldberg attacked Scott while she and her co-hosts interviewed Clay Cane, who recently released a book titled, “The Grift: The Downward Spiral of Black Republicans.” 

    “Let’s not forget, he voted against The Voting Rights Act, gutted the George Floyd Policing Act, and came on this very show and denied systemic racism,” Cane said.

    The radically liberal co-host Sunny Hostin responded by claiming that Scott “insulted” her when he appeared on “The View” last year.

    “Well, I was here, too,” Goldberg said before viciously attacking Scott by saying that “he was a Looney Tune.”

    Related: Senator Tim Scott To Serve As Trump Surrogate In Outreach To Black Voters

    Joy Behar Chimes In

    Co-host Joy Behar chimed in to whine that it is difficult for her to watch Scott speak at Donald Trump rallies, adding that he is  “desperate” for power. 

    “What’s sad about Tim Scott is that I think he knows that if he called out the bigotry in his own party versus endorsing a bigot for president, he knows they would throw him out faster than Liz Cheney,” Cane said.

    “It’s pathetic to watch,” Behar continued, going on to note that Scott recently got engaged. “That’s because he wants the job as VP, right? So the engagement was a good way to say, ‘Hey, I’m going to be married. I’m going to be legit. I can be a vice president to Trump.’”

    Related: Tim Scott Won’t Be President, But Will Be a Husband

    Check out this full segment in the video below.

    Scott Schools ‘The View’ Hosts

    While appearing on “The View” last year, Scott refused to cater to the left-wing narrative of systemic racism in the U.S.

    “One of the reasons why I’m on the show is because of the comments that were made frankly on this show that the only way for a young African-American kid to be successful in this country is to be the exception and not the rule. That’s a dangerous, offensive, disgusting message to send to our young people today that the only way to succeed is by being the exception,” Scott said at the time, according to Fox News.

    Not stopping there, Scott proceeded to boast about the African-American success in the U.S., pointing out the record low unemployment rate among African Americans.

    “Progress in America is palpable, it can be measured in generations,” he said. “I look back at the fact that my grandfather, born in 1921 in Salley, South Carolina, when he was on a sidewalk, a White person was coming — he had to step off and not make eye contact.”

    “That man believed then, with some doubt now, in the goodness of America, because he believed that faith in God, faith in himself, and faith in what the future could hold for his kids, would unleash opportunities in ways that you cannot imagine,” Scott added. “So, what I’m suggesting is that yesterday’s exception is today’s rule.”

    Check out his full appearance on “The View” in the video below.

    There’s nobody that shameless liberals like Goldberg despise more than a black conservative, as the existence of someone like Scott completely destroys their narrative that the Republican Party is full of racists. Goldberg can bash Scott all that she wants to, but if she really wants to see a “looney tune,” all she has to do is look in the mirror.

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    James Conrad

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  • Tim Scott Won't Be President, But Will Be a Husband

    Tim Scott Won't Be President, But Will Be a Husband

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    Culture

    Tim Scott X

    Former presidential candidate and current South Carolina Senator Tim Scott just announced that he is engaged.

    He had mentioned he had a girlfriend in the past, but now it’s official: He’s getting getting hitched.

    Scott shared the news and “the moment” on his X account, thanking now-fiance Mindy for saying yes.

    RELATED: Media Accuses Trump Of Racism For Using Nikki Haley’s Real Name

    ‘She Said YES’

    58-year-old Scott brought his lady friend Mindy Noce on stage on November 8 at the third GOP primary presidential debate.

    The senator announced his engagement on Sunday in a short and loving social media post that showed the moment proposed to her at a Kiawah Island beach in South Carolina.

    Noce, an interior designer, made Scott’s day.

    “She said YES,” Scott tweeted. “Mindy, thank you for making me the luckiest man in the world.”

    Scott also included Proverbs 18:22 from the Bible, “He who finds a wife finds what is good and receives favor from the Lord.”

    Meet Mindy Noce

    What do we know about Scott’s fiance?

    Noce, who is 47, is a mother of three who lives in Charleston, South Carolina.

    The New York Post reports, “She works as an interior designer for the Charleston-based Atlantic Properties of Lowcountry real estate firm, according to her online company bio. Noce, who is an avid runner and tennis enthusiast, is a self-described “mover-and-shaker with a creative eye and love for people.”

    The story continued:

    Noce studied at the College of Charleston where she majored in Health Science, her company bio says.

    She has lived in Charleston ever since graduation but was first introduced to the area while watching her three older brothers play football at The Citadel.

    Noce has divided her time between the coastal enclave of Isle of Palms and Charleston’s Daniel Island for almost 20 years.

    The Post added, “She has previously been described by Scott as ‘a lovely Christian girl.’”

    RELATED: Megyn Kelly Torches Nikki Haley For Refusing To Say If Men Can Become Women – ‘Wangs And Caucuses’

    Congrats!

    Scott’s personal romantic life became a subject of discussion during his 2024 Republican primary bid, in which he insisted he had been seeing a woman for some time.

    Now it’s all out in the open and Tim Scott seems to be happier than ever about what the future might bring.

    Congratulations to the newly engaged couple!

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  • Sen. Tim Scott, 58, announces engagement to Mindy Noce

    Sen. Tim Scott, 58, announces engagement to Mindy Noce

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    South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, 58, is engaged.

    The longtime bachelor announced he would marry Mindy Noce on social media late Sunday. Scott posted one photo of himself popping the question on bended knee and a second picture of Noce flashing an engagement ring.

    “She said YES,” Scott captioned those photos on X. “Mindy, thank you for making me the luckiest man in the world.”

    The evangelical politician also captioned the photos with a bible verse from the Book of Proverbs. Politico described Noce as a “Charleston-area interior designer and mother of three” after she appeared with Scott at a November event shortly before the senator suspended his brief bid for the Republican Party’s presidential nomination. Scott said at the time he’d been dating Noce for about a year.

    The Washington Post reported in September that Scott’s being a quinquagenarian bachelor was raising questions among conservative voters. Scott countered that he was in a relationship, but not one he was prepared to make public.

    “I can’t imagine dragging her onto the campaign trail unless I have the intention of marrying her,” he said. “I hope that happens, to be honest with you.”

    Days before proposing to Noce, Scott committed to supporting Donald Trump as the GOP candidate in November’s presidential election. That endorsement, made Friday, could help propel Trump over former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley. Haley elevated Scott from the House of Representatives to the Senate in 2013 when Sen. Jim DeMint retired.

    Trump and Haley will face off in South Carolina’s Republican primary next month. There’s speculation Trump could reward Scott’s loyalty by making the North Charleston, N.C. native his vice presidential nominee.

    With News Wire Services

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    Brian Niemietz

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  • Trump’s support from GOP leadership strengthens ahead of New Hampshire primary

    Trump’s support from GOP leadership strengthens ahead of New Hampshire primary

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    Trump’s support from GOP leadership strengthens ahead of New Hampshire primary – CBS News


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    With just four days to go until the Republican presidential primary in New Hampshire, there are new indications that Republicans are closing ranks around former President Donald Trump. On Friday night, Sen. Tim Scott is expected to endorse Trump at a New Hampshire rally, marking a major setback to former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley. Caitlin Huey-Burns reports from the Granite State.

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  • Now It’s Nikki Haley

    Now It’s Nikki Haley

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    Does Nikki Haley really have a shot at beating Donald Trump? Does any Republican?

    On Monday afternoon, a basketball gym in Bluffton, South Carolina, was packed with people who had come to hear Haley’s latest sales pitch. Hundreds more were waiting outside. No Republican candidate besides Trump can reliably draw more than a thousand attendees, but about 2,500 showed up for Haley. (Granted, this speech was in Haley’s home state, where she formerly served as governor. Also, the gym was a stone’s throw from the Sun City retirement community, a place where, gently speaking, people may have had nothing better to do at 2 p.m. on a Monday.) One of Haley’s volunteers told me this weekday event had originally been booked at a nearby restaurant, but that, given the current excitement of the campaign, organizers pivoted to the gym, on the University of South Carolina at Beaufort campus. Everyone in Haley’s orbit is understandably riveted. She’s squarely challenging Florida Governor Ron DeSantis for second place in the Republican presidential primary, no matter how second that place may be.

    While the former president still floats high above his dwindling field of competitors, Haley is the only person who keeps rising in the polls. Her climb is steady, not a blip. Haley’s campaign and super PAC are planning to spend $10 million on advertisements over the next eight weeks across Iowa and New Hampshire. On Tuesday, she received an endorsement from the Koch brothers’ network, Americans for Prosperity Action, and along with it an undisclosed amount of financial support. (It will be a lot.) But this year-end, all-in effort to stop Trump ignores the fact that he is a singular vortex, a once-in-a-century figure, a living martyr with a traveling Grateful Dead–like roadshow. His abhorrent behavior and legal woes do not matter. Three weeks ago, at his rally in South Florida, vendors told me that items with Trump’s mug shot are their biggest sellers. How does a mere generational figure, as her supporters hope Haley might be, compete with that?

    Haley bounded up onstage in a light-blue blazer and jeans. “We’ve been through a lot together,” she told the crowd. She meandered back and forth—no lectern, no teleprompter. When you ask people what they like about her, many point to her presence, her poise. Haley delivers her stump speech in a singsong voice. A few words, a pause, a smile. Speaking to the Low Country crowd, she seemed to be thickening her southern accent and peppering in a few extra-emphatic finger points for good measure. She’s just a down-home, neighborly southerner whose most recent job happened to be in Manhattan, serving at the United Nations. The volunteer who had bragged to me about the venue change later pulled out his phone and showed me a photo of himself and Haley at a wedding reception. He pointed to her bare feet. She’s so real, he said.

    Several women in the audience were wearing pink shirts with a Margaret Thatcher quote on the back: If you want something said, ask a man. If you want something done, ask a woman. Sue Ruby, a 74-year-old attendee from nearby Savannah, Georgia, was wearing a WOMEN FOR NIKKI button on her sweater. “I feel like we’ve given men a lot of years to straighten our society out, and they haven’t done so great, so let’s try a woman,” she said. Ruby told me she’s a Republican who begrudgingly voted for Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden in the past two elections because she viewed Trump as a threat to democracy. A Sun City resident named Lorraine, age 79, told me that “it’s time for a woman,” but that she would nevertheless vote for Trump if he wins the nomination. “I don’t want to vote for the opposite,” she said, refusing to say Biden’s name. Carolyn Ballard, an 80-year-old woman from Hilton Head, South Carolina, told me she’s a lifelong Republican who voted for Trump twice, but that she believes he’s past his prime and that Haley is her candidate. “He just irritates people and he stirs up a lot of trouble,” she said of Trump. “Although he’s very smart, and he did a lot for the country. I mean, everybody was happy when he was president.”

    Haley doesn’t lean as hard into gender dynamics as past female presidential candidates have. Nevertheless, she skillfully uses her womanhood and Indian heritage as setups for certain lines. “I have been underestimated in everything I’ve ever done,” she told the room. “And it’s a blessing, because it makes me scrappy. No one’s going to outwork me in this race. No one’s going to outsmart me in this race.” Or this: “Strong girls become strong women, and strong women become strong leaders,” which had a surprise left turn: “And none of that happens if we have biological boys playing in girls’ sports.” (Huge applause.)

    Courting Never Trump voters, exhausted Trump voters, and, yes, even some likely Trump voters simultaneously is not an easy trick. She hardly ever criticizes her former boss. Here’s her most biting critique from Monday: “I believe President Trump was the right president at the right time … and I agree with a lot of his policies. But the truth is, rightly or wrongly, chaos follows him.” (Note the passivity; she won’t even say Trump catalyzes the chaos.) Having already served as his ambassador to the UN, she may be under consideration for vice president. Compared with his attacks on Ron DeSantis, Trump has gone relatively soft on her, opting for the mid-century misogynistic slight “birdbrain.” Like most of her competitors, Haley has said she would pardon him.

    Whereas Trump has tacked authoritarian and apocalyptic, Haley has mostly kept her messaging grounded. At the rally, she bemoaned the price of groceries and gas. “Biden worries more about sagebrush lizards than he does about Americans being able to afford their energy,” she quipped. (She also called out her fellow Republicans for adding to the deficit.) She’s a military wife, and spoke about her husband’s PTSD and the persistent problem of homeless veterans. Though she lacks Trump’s innate knack for zingers, she landed one about how things might change if members of Congress got their health care through the VA: “It’ll be the best health care you’ve ever seen, guaranteed.”

    Although many of her fellow Republicans have adopted a nativist view of the world, Haley waxes at length about America’s geopolitical role. (And subsequently gets tagged as a globalist.) “The world is literally on fire,” she said Monday. She affirmed her support for both Israel and Ukraine, and went long on the triple threat of Russia, China, and Iran, paying particular attention to China as a national-security issue. In doing so, knowingly or not, she began to sound quite Trumpy. “They’re already here. They’ve already infiltrated our country,” Haley said. “We’ve got to start looking at China the way they look at us.” She called for an end to normal trade relations with China until they stop “murdering” Americans with fentanyl. She chastened the audience with images of China’s 500 nuclear warheads and its rapidly expanding naval fleet. “Dictators are actually very transparent. They tell us exactly what they’re going to do,” she said.

    Perhaps Haley’s biggest advantage right now is her relative youth. She’ll turn 52 three days before the New Hampshire primary. Trump has lately been making old-man gaffes, drawing comparisons to Biden, who was first elected to the Senate the year Haley was born. She speaks wistfully of “tomorrow,” of leaving certain things—unspecified baggage—in the past. “You have to go with a new generational leader,” Haley proclaimed. Onstage, she endorsed congressional term limits and the idea of mental-competency tests for public servants older than 75. The Senate, she joked, had become “the most privileged nursing home in the country.” Throwing shade at both Trump and Biden, she spoke of the need for leaders at “the top of their game.” Hundreds of gray-and-white-haired supporters before her nodded and murmured in approval.

    Monday’s event took place roughly 90 miles south of Charleston, where, in 2015, Dylann Roof murdered nine Black parishioners at Emanuel AME Church, hoping to start a race war. At the time, Haley was governor of South Carolina, and Trump—who had descended the golden escalator and announced his candidacy for president just the day before—still seemed like a carnival act. Photos of Roof posing with a Confederate flag ricocheted across social media. Haley had the flag taken down from the South Carolina statehouse, a reversal from her earlier position on the flag. Five years later, after the murder of George Floyd, Haley tweeted that, “in order to heal,” Floyd’s death “needs to be personal and painful for everyone.” During Monday’s rally, though, she sounded much more like an old-school Republican: “America’s not racist; we’re blessed,” she said. “Our kids need to love America. They need to be saying the Pledge of Allegiance when they start school.”

    As her audience grows, she continues to tiptoe along a very fine line: not MAGA, not anti-MAGA. In lieu of Trump-style airbrushed fireworks and bald eagles and Lee Greenwood, she’s going for something slightly classier (leaving the stage to Tom Petty’s “American Girl”) while still seizing every opportunity to own the libs. At the rally, she attacked the military’s gender-pronoun training and received substantial applause. “We’ve got to end this national self-loathing that’s taken over our country,” she said. Early in her speech, she promised that she would speak hard truths. As she approached her conclusion, one hard truth stuck out: “Republicans have lost the last seven out of eight popular votes for president. That is nothing to be proud of. We should want to win the majority of Americans.” It was the closest thing to a truly forward-thinking message that any serious Republican has offered this cycle.

    In the most generous of interpretations, the race for the GOP nomination is now among three people: Haley, DeSantis, and Trump. Mike Pence is already out. Tim Scott, Haley’s fellow South Carolinian, dropped out two weeks ago. Vivek Ramaswamy, who has struggled to break out of single digits in the polls, recently rented an apartment in Des Moines and will almost certainly stay in the race through the Iowa caucuses. Ramaswamy has also unexpectedly become Haley’s punching bag: Her campaign said she pulled in $1 million in donations after calling him “scum” during the last debate.

    At next week’s debate in Alabama, the stage will likely be winnowed to Ramaswamy, Haley, and DeSantis. (“When the stage gets smaller, our chances get bigger,” Haley told her rally crowd.) DeSantis seems to be betting his whole campaign on Iowa, and has secured the endorsement of Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds. This weekend, DeSantis will complete his 99-county tour of the state. Haley needs to beat DeSantis, but she also needs his voters if she has any serious shot of taking on Trump. If DeSantis drops out before Haley, his supporters are far more likely to flock to Trump. So maybe Haley needs a deus ex machina. In 2020, Biden’s campaign was viewed as all but cooked when, here in South Carolina, with the help of Representative Jim Clyburn, everything turned around, propelling him to Super Tuesday and the nomination.

    Haley’s campaign declined to let her speak with me. A spokesperson, Olivia Perez-Cubas, instead emailed me the following statement: “Poll after poll show Nikki Haley is the best challenger to Donald Trump and Joe Biden. That’s why the largest conservative grassroots coalition in the country just got behind her. Nikki is second in Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina and is the only candidate with the momentum to go the distance. Ron DeSantis has a short shelf life with his Iowa-or-bust strategy.”

    As rally-goers made their way to the parking lot, I struck up conversation with a man in a T-shirt that read NOPE NOT AGAIN, with Trump’s hair and giant red necktie decorating the O. He wore a camouflage baseball hat with an American flag on the dome. The man, Mike Stevens, told me he was a 25-year Army veteran, and that he was disgusted with Trump.

    “He’s a bully. He’s not good. He causes hate and discontent,” Stevens said. “I mean, he didn’t uphold the Constitution. And now we’ve had a judge say that. First time ever—no peaceful transfer of power? Even Al Gore did it. I’ve always been a Republican, but if it’s him and Biden, I’ll vote for Biden, I guess.”

    He was excited about Haley, and had been texting his friends and family about her rally—trying to wean them off their Trump addiction. But he also told me he had written Haley a letter: He was dismayed by her promise to pardon Trump, and he needed her to know that.

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    John Hendrickson

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  • GOP Candidates Got Away With Fake Claims About Abortion At Their Debate (Again)

    GOP Candidates Got Away With Fake Claims About Abortion At Their Debate (Again)

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    A day after Democrats and abortion rights advocates chalked up a string of electoral victories around the country, GOP presidential candidates on Wednesday night appeared to have learned nothing from their party’s losses.

    During the third Republican primary debate, moderator Kristen Welker of NBC News asked the five presidential hopefuls how they see their party’s path forward on the issue of abortion, given that they keep losing elections over their attacks on women’s reproductive rights. Most doubled down on their opposition to abortion, and then made nonsensical claims about Democrats advocating for no restrictions on abortion in any scenario.

    The moderators did nothing to call them out for it, either.

    “Let’s just be clear,” said Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. “The Democrats have taken a position they will not identify the point at which there should be any protection, all the way up until birth. That is wrong and we cannot stand for that.”

    “I am 100% pro-life … I would certainly, as president of the United States, have a 15-week national limit,” said Sen. Tim Scott (S.C.). “I would not allow California, Illinois or New York to have abortion up until the day of birth.”

    Scott went on to say he thinks “it’s unethical and immoral to allow for abortions up until the day of birth,” which, to be clear, is not something that anybody is calling for, anywhere.

    “We have the opportunity to stop that reckless behavior,” Scott vowed.

    Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.), a GOP presidential contender, said he thinks “it’s unethical and immoral to allow for abortions up until the day of birth.” Nobody is calling for doing this, anywhere.

    Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie briefly laid out why he thinks abortion rights should be decided on a state-by-state basis. But then he, too, waded into the made-up claim about Democrats wanting people to be able to have abortions while delivering babies at full term.

    “In my home state of New Jersey, it goes up to nine months that you can get an abortion,” Christie said. “I find that morally reprehensible. But that is what the people in my state voted for.”

    Wednesday night’s debate is not the first time the GOP candidates have spread misinformation about abortion. Many of the same claims, including that people were getting abortions up until birth, were on full display during the first Republican debate in August.

    And it’s still not true. While some Democrats have supported allowing abortion later in pregnancy to protect the life and health of the pregnant person, it is not true that Democrats support abortions of healthy pregnancies up until the moment of birth ― or that they are happening at all.

    The reality is that abortions later in pregnancy are extremely rare. Fewer than 1% of abortions even happen at 21 weeks or later, and after 26 weeks, even fewer are carried out and they are generally for pregnant people facing emergency health situations. A fetus is usually able to survive outside the womb at around 24 weeks, which is considered the viability threshold.

    Abortion has been a sticky issue for Republicans, and more so than ever in the year since the Supreme Court’s decision in Dobbs v. Jackson overturned the national right to abortion. Since then, GOP-fueled abortion bans and attempts to restrict abortion have proved deeply unpopular with voters. Democrats have been campaigning heavily on a pro-choice agenda, promising to protect reproductive rights — a stance that has been credited with propelling them to victory in crucial races.

    Democrats racked up more electoral wins around the country on Tuesday night. In Ohio, voters approved a constitutional amendment ensuring access to abortion. In Virginia, Democrats took control of the state House and cemented their hold on the state Senate, delivering a huge setback to GOP Gov. Glenn Youngkin and his plans to push through a 15-week abortion ban. Meanwhile, voters in deep red Kentucky reelected a Democratic governor whose campaign centered on protecting abortion rights.

    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, another GOP presidential contender, accused Democrats of refusing to "identify the point at which there should be any protection, all the way up until birth. That is wrong and we cannot stand for that.” This is not Democrats' position on abortion.
    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, another GOP presidential contender, accused Democrats of refusing to “identify the point at which there should be any protection, all the way up until birth. That is wrong and we cannot stand for that.” This is not Democrats’ position on abortion.

    GIORGIO VIERA via Getty Images

    Vivek Ramaswamy said Wednesday that he wanted to talk about abortion — as a man.

    “They say men have trouble speaking on this issue,” Ramaswamy said, without saying who has actually said that. “I don’t think we need to be that way.”

    He went on to talk about the accuracy of paternity tests, a story once told by Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, and then called for greater “sexual responsibility for men” because ultimately, he said, abortions aren’t about women’s rights.

    “It’s not men’s rights versus women’s rights,” Ramaswamy declared. “It’s about human rights.”

    Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, the only woman on the stage, was the only candidate who appeared to have learned something from her party’s string of electoral losses.

    In a noticeable change of tune from the first GOP debate, where she demanded that President Joe Biden reveal where he would draw the line on abortions, Haley said Wednesday that abortion is a personal issue for everyone. She said even though she’s pro-life, now that Roe v Wade has been overturned, it’s time to stop attacking women and find consensus.

    “Let’s make sure we encourage adoptions. Let’s make sure we make contraception accessible. Let’s make sure none of these state laws put women in jail or give her the death penalty for getting an abortion,” Haley said. “Let’s focus on how to save as many babies as we can and support as many moms as we can and stop the judgment. We don’t need to divide America over this issue anymore.”

    She drew some of the loudest applause of the night.

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  • ‘Melania’s Worst Nightmare’: Jimmy Kimmel Shares Truly Unnerving Trump Footage

    ‘Melania’s Worst Nightmare’: Jimmy Kimmel Shares Truly Unnerving Trump Footage

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    “It’s a who’s who of who has no chance to beat Donald Trump,” Kimmel declared, referring to the five as “dopefuls” instead of hopefuls.

    “But it is ridiculous to have these debates without the frontrunner,” he noted. “You know things have gone sideways when you’re watching something and you think, ‘God, I wish Donald Trump was there.’”

    So Kimmel gave Trump his own debate ― one where he’s battling himself:

    “That’s like Melania’s worst nightmare come true,” Kimmel said.

    See more of Kimmel’s take on Trump ― including the former president’s latest legal developments in New York ― in his Wednesday night monologue:

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  • Key moments from the third Republican presidential primary debate

    Key moments from the third Republican presidential primary debate

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    Key moments from the third Republican presidential primary debate – CBS News


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    Five presidential candidates seeking the Republican nomination went toe-to-toe at the third primary debate in Miami on Wednesday night. CBS News chief Washington correspondent Major Garrett anchors a special edition of “America Decides.”

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  • Biggest winners and losers from third Republican primary debate

    Biggest winners and losers from third Republican primary debate

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    Republican 2024 presidential contenders faced high stakes in the third primary debate, but some candidates fared better than others Wednesday night in Miami, Florida.

    Candidates sparred over issues from federal spending, Ukraine and China in the showdown, which arrived roughly two months before the first votes of the election will be cast in the Iowa caucuses. Five candidates—former South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley; Florida Governor Ron DeSantis; ex-New Jersey Governor Chris Christie; South Carolina Senator Tim Scott; and entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy—verbally wrangled on the stage.

    The GOP race front-runner, however, was again a no-show. Former President Donald Trump, who continues to hold a substantial lead over his Republican rivals, skipped the debate, as he did the first two. He has pointed to his poll numbers as the reason for his snubbing of the debates. Trump’s absence left the other five qualifying candidates aiming to prove they deserve the GOP nomination.

    Here’s an overview of who won and who lost on the big stage.

    Republican presidential candidates on Wednesday attend the party’s third primary debate at the Knight Concert Hall at the Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts in Miami, Florida. Candidates sparred over issues from China to federal spending.
    MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images

    Winner: Israel

    Israel emerged as a major victor during the debate. Candidates rallied behind the nation amid its war against Hamas, which on October 7 launched thousands of missiles into Israel from the Gaza Strip. Israel has since cut off food, water and electricity to Gaza, launching its own attacks, including a ground operation.

    Candidates all voiced support for Israel, saying they would tell Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu he has the right and responsibility to respond to the Hamas attack.

    “The last thing we need to do is to tell Israel what to do. The only thing we should be doing is supporting them in eliminating Hamas,” Haley said.

    Loser: Ukraine

    Ukraine, however, emerged as a loser. Candidates, as in past debates, voiced disagreement over whether the United States should provide aid for Ukraine as it defends itself against the invasion from Russia. More traditional conservatives, such as Haley, have called for continued support, but more MAGA-aligned candidates have called for more limits on aid.

    DeSantis said he would not send U.S. troops to Ukraine, while Scott said he disagreed with coupling aid to Israel and Ukraine, a move that Ukraine aid supporters hope would boost its chances of passing Congress.

    Ramaswamy took a stronger stance against Ukraine, calling President Volodymyr Zelensky, who is Jewish, “a Nazi.”

    “[Ukraine] has celebrated a Nazi in its ranks, the comedian in cargo pants, a man called Zelensky,” he said.

    Winner: Donald Trump

    Moderators opened the debate by directly asking Trump’s rivals why they would make a better president than him. Candidates continued lines of attacks from previous debates—questioning why he is skipping the debate, and knocking him over the national debt.

    But those attacks have not proven to be effective, as Trump withstood them following the second debate, after which his poll numbers continued to hold steady.

    Loser: Vivek Ramaswamy

    Ramaswamy sparked boos from the crowd over launching a personal attack against Haley. The former South Carolina governor has supported a ban on TikTok, a Chinese-owned app that has come under scrutiny for national security concerns. She criticized Ramaswamy for using the app to campaign, and he responded by saying that Haley’s daughter previously used the social media platform.

    The remark elicited loud boos from the crowd, and Haley responded by calling him “scum.”

    As with the other candidates, Ramaswamy was tough on border control, but moved beyond the pack by suggesting that America build a wall on the northern border with Canada as well the southern border. “We need to skate to where the puck is going,” Ramaswamy said, despite northern border encounters making up 5% of all Customs and Border Patrol encounters in September 2023.

    Winner: Nikki Haley

    Haley faced new attacks from DeSantis about her record on China, but largely turned his critiques back on him, raising concerns about his recent record on the matter.

    Haley earned praise following the first two debates from analyst, who have said her past performances suggest she may be able to win over more moderate and independent voters. She held steady during Wednesday’s debate, drawing a contrast from other candidates on Ukraine and abortion, an issue that again proved difficult for Republicans in Tuesday night’s elections, which saw Republican defeats in Virginia’s legislative races and Kentucky’s gubernatorial race.

    She also earned praise from social media users for her response to Ramaswamy’s attack on her daughter’s past use of TikTok, telling him, “Leave my daughter out of your voice.”

    Losers: Ron DeSantis, Tim Scott

    DeSantis and Scott entered the debate in different positions. DeSantis needed a breakout moment during the debate to prove he can go head-to-head against Trump, whose polling lead has only grown since the last debate. Scott, meanwhile needed a particularly strong performance after struggling in the polls.

    Neither had any major slip-ups and remained steady, but they also lacked a major moment as they hope to boost their polling numbers.

    Loser: TikTok

    Republican candidates were united on banning social media app TikTok due to concerns that the Chinese government could access the personal data of American users. But the conversation extended past privacy to point to TikTok’s impact on young minds. “This is China trying to further divide the United States of America,” Christie said.

    The idea of a TikTok ban resonates with many Americans. In a March 2023 study by the Pew Research Center showed supporters of a ban outnumber opponents of a ban by more than 2 to 1.

    Winner: Debate Moderators

    Holt, Welker and Hewitt faced a separate challenge—controlling the candidates. The second debate in October received backlash from viewers after allowing candidates to frequently disrupt each other.

    Tonight’s moderators, however, took a different approach. Holt told the audience to “restrain” themselves when they erupted into thunderous applause early on in the debate.

    “Let’s not go down this road,” he said.

    Welker, meanwhile, took attack from Ramaswamy, who argued she should not be moderating the debate over conservative personalities such as Elon Musk or Tucker Carlson. However, she declined to engage in the attack, drawing praise on social media.

    “Smart move by Lester and Kristen Welker not to take the bait and give Vivek the attention he wanted from his cheap stunt,” wrote journalist Matt Lewis.

    Winner: Social Security … for Current Seniors

    All of the candidates on stage were effusive in their support for Social Security entitlements and made clear that they didn’t want to impact any current recipients. “My mama and every other mama out there — I will protect your social security,” said Scott.

    On the subject of keeping the program solvent, most evaded specific answers on whether the entitlement age should be raised.

    Christie came out as a clear supporter of raising the retirement age “a few years” for Americans in their 30s and 40s, but doesn’t think new funding should come from tax increases. “We are already overtaxed in this country and we shouldn’t raise taxes,” he said.

    Scott firmly said no to a raise on the retirement age. DeSantis seemed to lean away from a change to retirement age, noted that life expectancy is currently declining, so tethering entitlement dates to life expectancy doesn’t make sense.

    Both Christie and Haley brought up limitations on benefits for the wealthy, with Christie specifically calling out Warren Buffett by name.

    Ramaswamy was vague on solutions, but vowed to keep benefits for current seniors intact. When pushed for answers on entitlement reform for future generations, he responded “It’ll take a CEO from the next generation to do it.”