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The
candidates
in the
second
GOP
presidential
debate
are
(clockwise
from top
left)
South
Carolina’s
Sen. Tim
Scott,
Florida
Gov. Ron
DeSantis,
former
South
Carolina
Gov.
Nikki
Haley,
businessman
Vivek
Ramaswamy,
North
Dakota
Gov.
Doug
Burgum,
former
Vice
President
Mike
Pence
and
former
New
Jersey
Gov.
Chris
Christie.
(Associated
Press) |
|
5
takeaways
from
last
night's
Republican
presidential
debate
By Noah
Bierman
latimes.com
WASHINGTON
-
Republican
presidential
candidates
— with
the
notable
exception
of the
front-runner,
former
President
Trump —
held the
second
primary
debate
Wednesday
night at
the
Reagan
Presidential
Library
in Simi
Valley.
Here’s
what
happened
when
seven
other
GOP
candidates
faced
off:
Trump
took
fire for
being a
no-show,
but his
opponents
didn’t
highlight
his
biggest
vulnerabilities
Trump
skipped
the
debate
and is
not
likely
to lose
his
commanding
lead in
Republican
primary
polls.
He is
averaging
more
than 50
percent
of the
vote.
Some of
the
candidates
on stage
took a
few
shots at
Trump,
mostly
for not
showing
up. But
voters
who
tuned in
to Fox
News
Channel,
Fox
Business
Network
or
Univision
to watch
the
debate
did not
hear
much
about
the
former
president’s
string
of
criminal
indictments,
his
attempts
to
overturn
the 2020
election
or his
threats
to use
the
White
House to
punish
his
enemies
were he
reelected.
Former
New
Jersey
Gov.
Chris
Christie,
as
usual,
went the
hardest
at
Trump,
criticizing
his
compliments
for
Russian
President
Vladimir
Putin,
his lack
of
progress
on a
border
wall and
his
divisive
brand of
politics.
“This
guy has
not only
divided
our
party,
he’s
divided
families
all over
this
country,”
Christie
said.
“He
needs to
be voted
off the
island.”
But
Christie,
who is
basing
much of
his
campaign
on a
critique
of
Trump,
is not
gaining
much
traction
in
polls.
The
response
to
Christie
from
entrepreneur
Vivek
Ramaswamy,
whose
campaign
has
centered
on his
fealty
to
Trump’s
“Make
America
Great
Again”
agenda,
was more
emblematic
of how
Trump’s
rivals
have
approached
him.
“Trump
was an
excellent
president,”
Ramaswamy
said,
“but the
‘America
first’
agenda
does not
belong
to one
man.”
No one
seized
the
mantle
of No. 1
Trump
alternative
— but
Haley
took
some
shots
Florida
Gov. Ron
DeSantis,
once
Trump’s
top
rival,
failed
to stand
out,
showing
only
slightly
more
verve
than he
did in
the
initial
debate
last
month.
Former
South
Carolina
Gov.
Nikki
Haley,
who won
praise
after
the
first
debate,
did the
most to
assert
herself
this
time
around
as well.
She
attacked
Ramaswamy
for
embracing
Chinese-owned
TikTok —
“Every
time I
hear
you, I
feel a
little
bit
dumber
from
what you
say” —
went
after
DeSantis
for
supporting
his
state’s
offshore
drilling
ban, and
even
took on
her
fellow
South
Carolinian,
Sen. Tim
Scott,
over his
service
in
Congress
as the
federal
debt
soared.
The
exchanges
could
earn
Haley a
boost of
media
attention,
like the
one she
got
after
the
first
debate.
But she
has yet
to break
through
in
public
opinion
polls,
winning
an
average
of 6.3%
support
of
Republican
voters,
according
to
FiveThirtyEight,
a poll
aggregator.
The end
of
optimism
The
candidates
spoke
early
and
often of
Ronald
Reagan
as they
stood
beneath
a
retired
Air
Force
One
plane in
his
presidential
library.
But,
with few
exceptions,they
didn’t
offer
much of
the
Gipper’s
famous
optimism.
Voters
heard
about
failing
students,
out-of-control
crime,
fentanyl
deaths,
Mexican
drug
cartels
and the
rise in
transgender
identification,
which
was
portrayed
as a
“mental
health
disorder”
afflicting
the
nation’s
youth.
“I come
before
you
today as
a
candidate
for
president
because
I think
this
country’s
in a lot
of
trouble,”
said
former
Vice
President
Mike
Pence,
who has
cast
himself
as an
heir to
Reagan’s
policies
and
political
style.
“You
hear the
fire on
the
stage
tonight,
you hear
the fire
and all
of our
voices,
and it’s
because
Joe
Biden
has
weakened
this
country
at home
and
abroad.”
The dark
view is
more
evidence
of the
influence
of
Trump,
who
famously
warned
of
“American
carnage”
in his
inaugural
address.
But it
also
reflects
the mood
of much
of the
American
public.
Republicans,
in
particular,
tell
pollsters
they are
anxious
about
the
country’s
future.
The GOP
is
moving
further
right on
immigration
and the
border
No one
defended
President
Reagan
when the
moderators
showed
video of
him
supporting
a 1986
amnesty
for
nearly 3
million
people
who had
entered
the U.S.
illegally.
On the
contrary,
DeSantis
and
Haley
both
called
for use
of U.S.
military
force in
Mexico,
which
would
probably
be
viewed
as a
violation
of
Mexican
sovereignty.
“It’s
how we
deal
with our
terrorists,”
Haley
said,
explaining
her plan
to use
special
operations
forces
to break
up drug
cartels.
“Our own
country
is being
invaded,”
DeSantis
said.
In
another
telling
moment,
Pence
would
not say
whether
he
supported
a deal
with
Congress
to
protect
so-called
Dreamers,
who were
brought
to the
country
illegally
as
youths,
from
deportation.
That
group
once
enjoyed
bipartisan
support.
Polls
show
immigration
is a top
issue
for
Republican
primary
voters,
second
only to
inflation
in some
surveys.
And
voters
across
the
board
have
generally
given
the
Biden
administration
low
marks on
the
issue.
An NBC
News
poll
released
this
week
gives
Republicans
a huge
advantage
— 50% to
20% — on
the
question
of which
party
would do
a better
job
handling
border
security.
Republicans
are
divided
over how
to
address
the
autoworkers’
strike
The
Republican
Party
has
embraced
a
right-wing
form of
populism
in the
Trump
era, but
that has
not
translated
into
support
for
labor
unions.
No
candidate
sided
with the
United
Auto
Workers
strike
against
the Big
Three
automakers,
but the
rhetoric
of some
candidates
showed
the GOP
is wary
of
offending
the
workers.
Scott
took the
traditional
Republican
stance,
accusing
the
autoworkers
of
demanding
“4-day
French
work
weeks.”
The
other
candidates
steered
clear of
attacking
union
members’
demands
and
instead
went
after
other
targets.
Ramaswamy
and
Pence
criticized
the
“union
bosses,”
with
Pence
accusing
them of
fomenting
class
warfare.
Haley
said the
workers
should
be
picketing
the
White
House,
blaming
Biden’s
spending
bills
for
inflation
that has
hurt
earning
power.
North
Dakota
Gov.
Doug
Burgum
said
Biden
was at
fault
for
interfering
with the
markets
by
subsidizing
electric
cars.
The
issue
presents
a test
for a
party
that has
grown
dependent
on
blue-collar
workers
in
manufacturing
states
such as
Michigan
and
Pennsylvania
that
could
decide
the
general
election.
Trump
seems to
understand
the
stakes.
As his
opponents
debated
in
California
on
Wednesday
night,
he was
in
Michigan,
warning
that the
auto
industry
was
“being
assassinated”
by
electric
vehicles.
“You’re
all on
the
picket
lines
and
everything,
but it
doesn’t
make a
damn bit
of
difference
what you
get,” he
said.
“Because
in two
years,
you’re
all
going to
be out
of
business.”
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