Donald Trump steamrolled towards New Hampshire on Tuesday after his crushing win in Iowa cemented him as the likely Republican presidential nominee.
The twice-impeached former president romped home in the first contest of the drawn-out 2024 race for the White House, scoring 51% of Republican voters to trounce rivals Ron DeSantis and Nikki Haley for the biggest Iowa caucuses victory in modern history.
Victory in next Tuesday’s New Hampshire primary would mean Trump, 77, could all but seal the nomination and a grudge rematch against Joe Biden, as he aims for a sensational White House comeback despite a string of scandals that would sink most other politicians.
While Trump’s victory speech in a wintry Iowa at first struck an unusually conciliatory note — saying it was “time now for everybody, the country, to come together” — he soon reverted to the harsh rhetoric that promises one of the most divisive elections in memory.
He vowed to shut the Mexican border to stop an “invasion” of migrants, and hammered home the abrasive messaging that has fired up his base as he seeks what he says will be “retribution” against Democrat Biden.
“Trump is demonstrating impressive strength among blue-collar, working-class and rural voters. His victory was not a surprise,” Dennis J Goldford, a political science professor at Drake University in Des Moines, told AFP.
Trump was to hold a campaign event in New Hampshire last night, while Florida Governor DeSantis and former UN ambassador Haley were also heading to the East Coast state as they scramble to shore up their campaigns.
Ahead of Trump’s arrival in New Hampshire, plumber Vern Aylward, 64, said he was “happily surprised” by the size of Trump’s Iowa win.
“I think he proved himself when he was president,” Aylward told AFP after parking his white pickup truck. “The gas, price of food, just seemed like everything was going swimmingly.”
It’s a familiar narrative for Trump supporters and a dangerous one for Biden, 81, who is neck-and-neck or behind the Republican in match-up polls, with voters particularly concerned about inflation.
But the message is working against his Republican opponents too. In frozen Iowa, Trump opened an unprecedented 30-point gap over DeSantis, who had pinned his hopes on a strong showing, while Trump’s former UN ambassador Haley was third with 19%.
The Republican field also narrowed, with biotech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy dropping out and endorsing Trump on Monday night. Long-shot former Arkansas governor Asa Hutchinson — the last Republican candidate to openly criticise Trump — ended his campaign on Tuesday.
Haley and DeSantis meanwhile portray themselves as Trump alternatives, but their continued battle could also benefit him by splitting the vote against him.
“I’m going after Trump,” Haley, the only woman candidate in the Republican race, told CNN. “People are tired of the division and the chaos.”
Haley said she would not join the next Republican debate ahead of the vote in New Hampshire, her preferred battleground, without Trump. Trump has so far refused to take part in any debates.
DeSantis is also heading to New Hampshire after a pitstop in South Carolina, seeking to deal an early blow to Haley, who was formerly governor there. But while DeSantis confirmed that he would stay in the race to “reverse the madness,” he is considered weak in New Hampshire and many analysts declared his campaign all but dead.
The US election is being watched around the world, with allies Ukraine and Israel embroiled in wars and many countries anxious about a return of Trump’s “America First” policies.
Belgium’s Prime Minister Alexander De Croo, whose country holds the EU’s presidency, urged Europe not to “fear” a Trump return and to become more self-reliant.
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