Haley, Trump's last remaining rival, has infuriated the former
president by refusing to drop out of the nominating race after
his back-to-back wins in Iowa and New Hampshire strengthened his
grip on the nomination and set up a likely general election
rematch with Democratic President Joe Biden in November.
Haley's campaign used a new ad and email blasts to call Trump a
liar, a weak candidate and a coward for not debating her.
Trump, who leads Haley by wide margins in opinion polls in South
Carolina, her home state where she served as governor, deployed
local politicians to savage her at an event in Columbia, the
state capital.
Bill Taylor, a Republican state representative and onetime Haley
ally who is backing Trump in the primary contest, called her a
political opportunist.
"Nikki is always about Nikki," Taylor said.
Another state representative supporting Trump, Stewart Jones,
said Haley is weak on immigration, echoing a talking point put
out by the Trump campaign on Thursday.
Trump has made immigration a focus of the presidential battle,
seizing on an issue that is a top concern for Republican voters
as the Biden administration has struggled to cope with a surge
of asylum seekers on the U.S.-Mexico border. Trump has
criticized Haley for once opposing his proposed border wall.
In a new ad, Haley touted her record as governor, including the
signing of a tough immigration bill, and accused Trump of lying
about her achievements.
In an email to supporters, her campaign called Trump a "gift" to
Democrats. Polls show Haley with significant leads in a
head-to-head match up with Biden, but a Trump-Biden race to be
much closer.
"Democrats couldn't dream up a weaker candidate if they tried,"
Haley's campaign said of Trump.
So far, most Republican voters do not appear to agree. A new
Washington Post-Monmouth University poll shows Trump leading
Haley by 58% to 32% among potential Republican primary voters in
South Carolina.
(Reporting by Tim Reid in Washington; Editing by Colleen Jenkins
and Daniel Wallis)
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