Republican candidate Donald Trump gestures to the crowd during a New Hampshire presidential primary election night watch party.—Reuters
Republican candidate Donald Trump gestures to the crowd during a New Hampshire presidential primary election night watch party.—Reuters

MANCHESTER: Get ready for round two: Donald Trump is set to face off with President Joe Biden for the White House once again after winning the New Hampshire primary, promising 10 months of extraordinary tension and bitterness.

The only remaining challenger for the Republican presidential nomination, Nikki Haley, vowed to fight on — but her defeat on Tuesday left her with no realistic chance of chasing down the 77-year-old former president.

Trump previewed the divisive rhetoric to come in the campaign for November’s cliff-hanger election with an angry victory speech that attacked Haley for having a “very bad night” and also lashed out at her dress.

Even Biden, 81, accepted it was “now clear” that he faced a rematch with Trump — one that polling suggests many Americans don’t want — and warned that the future of American democracy itself rode on the result of the election in November.

Haley had hoped for a major upset in the north-eastern state, but Trump — her former boss when she was UN ambassador during his chaotic administration — won by around 54 per cent to 43pc, with some 91pc of votes counted.

Having crushed his rivals in the first vote of the campaign in Iowa, Trump said that when the primary contest reaches Haley’s home state of South Carolina in February “we’re going to win easily.” The twice-indicted former president kept to his hard-right messaging, with no hint of reaching out to the more moderate voters who supported Haley, some of whom were concerned by the 91 criminal indictments facing Trump.

At one point swearing on primetime TV, Trump said the US was a “failing country” and loaded his speech with ominous warnings about immigration and false claims about winning the 2020 election.

‘Stakes could not be higher’

President Biden responded by saying: “It is now clear that Donald Trump will be the Republican nominee.” “And my message to the country is the stakes could not be higher. Our Democracy. Our personal freedoms — from the right to choose to the right to vote,” Biden said in a statement.

His campaign had even started selling merchandise for a rematch, including a T-shirt with the slogan: “Together, we will beat Trump. Again.”

Haley insisted the race was “far from over” and told supporters that Democrats actually want to run against right-wing populist Trump due to his record of sowing “chaos”. “They know Trump is the only Republican in the country who Joe Biden can defeat,” said Haley, 52, who has recently stepped up attacks on Trump as showing signs of being cognitively impaired.

But no Republican has ever won both opening contests and not ultimately secured the party’s nomination.

“I think it’s a two-person race now between Trump and Biden,” Keith Nahigian, a veteran of six presidential campaigns and former member of Trump’s transition team, told AFP.

US media said the New Hampshire results did hold hope for Biden, despite recent polling showing him neck and neck or even behind Trump in a rematch.

Not only did Trump lose nearly half the Republican vote despite effectively running as an incumbent who is known to voters, but his failure to win over independents and floating voters gave succor to Democrats.

Published in Dawn, January 25th, 2024

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