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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
World
Lois Beckett in Simi Valley, California

Crosstalk and weak zingers hand win to absent Trump at Republican debate

A white woman and a Black man stand at neighboring lecterns on a brightly lit stage. The woman is speaking, with both palms raised, as the man listens.
The former South Carolina governor Nikki Haley had a rebuttal ready when the South Carolina senator Tim Scott criticized an expensive purchase. Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images

It’s hard to pick the low point of a debate that dissolved frequently into incoherent crosstalk and included former vice-president Mike Pence, a Christian conservative who has famously said he would never dine alone with a woman other than his wife, attempting to make a joke about his sex life. (“My wife isn’t a member of the teachers’ union, but I gotta admit I’ve been sleeping with a teacher for 38 years,” he said.)

In a debate conducted not far from Ronald Reagan’s grave, seven GOP presidential candidates shouted and sniped at each other for two hours without producing a single standout moment.

Whether echoing Donald Trump’s rhetoric, or attempting to criticize him – Chris Christie dubbed him “Donald Duck” for choosing not to participate – none of the presidential hopefuls succeeded in upending the expectations of the race. Once again, Trump won the GOP debate without even having to show up.

On substantive issues, the Republican candidates endorsed virulent transphobia, with the entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy arguing that “transgenderism” is “a mental health disorder”. He said he wanted to end birthright citizenship, so that children born in the US to undocumented parents would not be given citizenship.

The Florida governor, Ron DeSantis, suggested he would address the fentanyl overdose crisis by using the US military against drug traffickers in Mexico, and treat them like “foreign terrorist organizations”. He also did not believe Republican losses in the 2022 midterm elections should be blamed on the party’s embrace of extreme anti-abortion policies.

Pence said his plan for preventing future mass shootings was not new gun control laws, but instituting “a federal expedited death penalty for anyone involved in a mass shooting”. (Research shows that many mass shooters are suicidal.)

But some of the brutal Trumpian rhetoric seemed to have lost its punch. “Yes, we’ll build the wall,” DeSantis said, sounding almost bored.

On Fox News after the debate, the former Trump adviser Kellyanne Conway argued that “nobody made the case” that they had something different from Trump to offer voters. “They want to build a wall, they want to secure the border, they sound a lot like him,” she said.

Trump’s rivals also tried, and largely failed, to produce memorable attack lines against each other.

A white man and an Indian man, both wearing black suits and standing at adjacent lecterns on a brightly lit stage, both appear to speak and both gesture with their hands.
Ron DeSantis suggested he would address the fentanyl overdose crisis by using the US military against drug traffickers in Mexico. Photograph: Mike Blake/Reuters

The South Carolina senator Tim Scott tried to criticize the former South Carolina governor Nikki Haley for a set of $50,000 curtains at her residence as UN ambassador. “Do your homework, Tim, because Obama bought those curtains,” Haley responded.

Haley, in turn, savaged the 38-year-old Ramaswamy for doing business in China and for joining the social media app TikTok, which Ramaswamy defended as a logical thing to do to help the party attract younger voters, even as he said that people under 16 should not be “using addictive social media”.

“TikTok is one of the most dangerous social media apps that we could have,” Haley said. “Honestly, every time I hear you, I feel a little bit dumber for what you say.

“We can’t trust you,” she said. “We can’t trust you.”

The reviews were mixed. New York Times political correspondent Maggie Haberman wrote early in the debate, “This is unwatchable.” But Fox News’ Laura Ingraham argued after the debate that Haley and Ramaswamy were the most promising candidates in two flavors – Ramaswamy as the populist, Haley as the more traditional conservative supported by GOP donors.

Ramaswamy seemed at one point to flaunt his youth and inexperience, acknowledging that as the “new guy”, he expected that voters would see him as “a young man who’s in a bit of a hurry, maybe a little ambitious, bit of a know-it-all”.

“I’m here to tell you, no, I don’t know it all. I will listen. I will have the best people, the best and brightest in this country, whatever age they are, advising me,” he promised.

Scott earned applause from the audience and praise from Sean Hannity for saying that, while he had experienced discrimination as a Black man, “America is not a racist country.”

At the end of the debate, the moderator Dana Perino of Fox News asked the candidates: “Which one of you onstage tonight should be voted off the island?” Almost everyone refused to reply. When Christie did, he attacked the one person who wasn’t on that particular island.

Donald Trump.

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