South-Carolina
Haley seeks game-changing win in South Carolina despite uphill climb
Former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley is working to muster momentum in the weeks ahead of the South Carolina Republican primary, which could prove to be a moment of reckoning for her presidential hopes.
Polling shows Haley trailing former President Trump in her home state, with The Hill-Decision Desk HQ average showing Trump up by more than 30 points in the state.
Despite the uphill climb, Haley’s allies say there is still enough time for her to close the gap with the former president in South Carolina, and at least one recent poll has shown her gaining support in the Palmetto State.
A poll released this week by American Promise and the Tyson Group showed Haley reaching 31 percent support, the first time she has received more than 30 percent in a South Carolina poll so far.
However, a Monmouth University-Washington Post poll released Thursday showed Trump leading with 58 percent support, up from 46 percent in September. Haley’s support also grew from 18 percent in September to 32 percent.
“Nikki Haley’s ability to come from behind is record-breaking in South Carolina,” said Dave Wilson, a South Carolina-based GOP strategist, referring to Haley’s past electoral wins in the state. “Is she going to be able to do it this time? Probably not because President Trump has such a high rating in almost every poll.”
On Monday, the Trump campaign rolled out a memo predicting a loss for Haley in her home state, calling the prospect “a humiliation.”
“South Carolina is different than New Hampshire and, as such, poses serious questions about the viability of the Haley campaign,” wrote senior Trump campaign advisers Susie Wiles and Chris LaCivita. “First, there is no tradition of cross-over voting in South Carolina, and Democrats have their Primary on February 3rd as part of the reshaped map and timing schedule for national Democrats. Anyone who votes in the February 3rd Democrat primary cannot vote in the GOP primary on February 24th, so Nikki’s losing strategy of counting on Democrats to pollute the Primary won’t work.”
Haley’s campaign responded with their own memo, asking, “Why is Donald Trump so obsessed with us?” with a “Mean Girls” meme attached.
Several factors are playing into Trump’s lead, including his national popularity among Republican primary voters as well as his status as the party’s de facto incumbent. But some South Carolina-specific explanations also explain why the former president is dominating. One of those factors is the demographic changes in South Carolina that have taken place since Haley left the governor’s mansion in 2017.
Census data shows that the Palmetto State had a 1.7 percent population growth rate in 2023 — the highest of any state — and gained more than 90,000 new residents. According to The Associated Press, 90 percent of South Carolina’s new population came from people moving from another U.S. state.
“When you have that level of people moving in, they’re bringing a different level of politics, themselves, to the table,” Wilson said.
“We went back through in 2020, and we were able to identify based upon voting habits,” he continued. “We were able to identify Trump voters, and as a matter of fact, in some key Senate races in the state Senate, we were able to identify thousands of people who were new to the election process, new to the Republican Party because of Donald Trump.”
“Those folks have been part of what’s been the evolution of the Republican Party as it is right now,” he said. “It’s the party of Trump, and that is a very difficult thing for Nikki Haley to overcome at this moment.”
Still, Haley’s supporters argue that Trump is on a weaker footing as the front-runner in the GOP primary.
“If Joe Biden, the incumbent president was only receiving 55 percent of the vote or less in his room, then all of us would be saying how the race is ready to move on and how dire of chances he has in November,” said Alex Stroman, a South Carolina-based Republican strategist.
Stroman also noted that Trump’s recent attacks on Haley continuing to remain in the race could stand to hurt him with voters concerned about issues such as crime, immigration and the economy.
“Two states have voted. Two of the smallest states in the country have voted, and he can’t even have a blowout win in either of those places,” Stroman said. “If he were truly confident about his standing in the party, he would be going around having speeches that talked about his vision for the country. But instead, he’s trying to punch at Nikki Haley and trying to rig the game so that she’s forced out of the race.”
Haley and her allies have also touted polling that shows her to be a formidable general election candidate against President Biden. A Quinnipiac poll released this week shows Haley beating Biden 47 to 42 percent support in a head-to-head match-up. However, Biden defeated Haley by 7 points in a five-person race including third-party candidates.
While Trump in many ways has shifted his focus to the national general election, Haley has remained laser-focused on closing the gap with the former president in her home state.
On Thursday, Haley’s campaign rolled out a new ad campaign titled “It’s a Great Day in South Carolina,” which is aimed at touting her record as governor and “to combat Donald Trump’s lies.” And on Thursday, Haley’s campaign launched a series of ads titled “Grumpy Old Men” to target Trump and Biden on their age.
Strategists say that for Haley to make headway in closing the gap with Trump, she needs to focus on her foreign policy strengths as former U.N. ambassador while tying them to a top issue for South Carolina Republican primary voters: immigration.
The Monmouth University-Washington Post poll showed 62 percent of South Carolina primary voters saying they trust Trump more on immigration, while 22 percent said they trusted Haley more.
“That is that blend of domestic and international issues that somebody has got to start addressing,” Wilson said. “And I think if Nikki Haley started addressing it from that standpoint, foreign policy takes on a whole bigger issue in towns like Greenville and Charleston and Florence and Columbia and Greer and Anderson and Myrtle Beach.”
“If she’s going to gain any additional traction and close that gap, she’s going to have start tying it back to what’s going on in peoples’ own backyards and how her experience will make a difference,” he continued.
Haley responded to skepticism about the durability of her campaign during an interview with “CBS Mornings” on Tuesday, saying her campaign is building momentum state by state.
“In New Hampshire, I moved 25 points in three weeks,” Haley told the network. “We are anywhere and everywhere in South Carolina.”
“My goal has always been to keep building,” she continued. “Now our goal in South Carolina, come in even stronger. That’s what we’re going to focus on doing.”
While there are questions about the future of her donors, Haley is in a strong position financially for now. Haley’s campaign said it raised $17 million last quarter and started 2024 with $14 million cash on hand. Her campaign has also touted recent fundraising hauls in the days following the New Hampshire primary.
“Money, money, money,” Wilson said. “If she doesn’t have dollars flowing into the campaign, she’s going to run out of gas.”
Copyright 2024 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
South-Carolina
South Carolina tops Allen 5-3 at North Charleston Coliseum; qualifying for Playoffs
NORTH CHARLESTON, S.C. (WCIV) — On the verge of clinching a ticket to the Kelly Cup Playoffs, the South Carolina Stingrays faced off against the Allen Americans Saturday at the North Charleston Coliseum, cheered on by 5,430 fans.
For the second straight night the Rays scored early, with forward Anthony Rinaldi sending home a goal giving the Stingrays a 1-0 lead only 3:14 into the period.
Over ten minutes later the Stingrays doubled their advantage thanks to Kyler Kupka who knocked home a center goal fed by Dean Loukus on the power play.
South Carolina was ahead 2-0 with 4 minutes left in the first, however Allen Americans player Danny Katic scored a quick goal making it 2-1 at the end of the first. Allen seemed to gain momentum after that goal with Harrison Blaisdell tying the game early in the second with a shorthanded goal.
Now with the two-goal lead buffer gone the Rays were searching for a break in Allen’s defenses.
READ MORE | Stingrays sign forward Casey McDonald after four-year college career at LIU
Yet again one of the newest team acquisitions delivered as Rays player Rinaldi tucked home an odd-man chance just over five minutes into the second period pushing South Carolina back in front, 3-2.
The Allen American’s goalie Marco Costantini was peppered with shots from the rays throughout the second, as they worked to regain a larger edge. Costantini blocked 17 shots on goal in the second period and both teams moved to the third maintaining a 3-2 score.
Over seven minutes into the third period Kupka punched home his second goal of the night, building South Carolina’s lead back to 4-2. The Americans responded quickly however, when forward Michael Gildon made a score with 8:19 left in regulation.
Heading into the final minutes of the game with only a one-goal cushion, the Stingrays earned a much needed insurance goal at the hands of Casey McDonald.
Though the Americans pulled their goalie to bring out an extra player with 2:32 left, they ended up scoring only one goal, unable to totally cover the two goal lead that the Stingrays had continually built up.
With this victory, the Stingrays have qualified for the Kelly Cup Playoffs for the 30th time in 33 seasons. South Carolina has points in 15 of its last 16 games, and have 24 wins at home this season, second most in the ECHL.
The Stingrays will return to the North Charleston Coliseum on March 22nd, against the Allen Americans for Pucks and Paws Day presented by Washes and Wags Pet Grooming at 3:05 p.m.
South-Carolina
The fault(s) in our state: The geological forces that cause SC’s earthquakes, explained
COLUMBIA — You might have missed it, but the Midlands was hit by yet another earthquake this week.
The Magnitude 2.1 earthquake struck just about two miles west of Irmo on March 19, according to a preliminary report by the U.S. Geological Survey. It was a “blink and you’ll miss it” temblor, as earthquakes of that size typically just spur minor disruptions — like causing suspended objects to swing — according to the USGS.
Over the past several years, the Midlands has experienced a higher-than-normal (at least from a human perspective) level of seismic activity, The Post and Courier has previously reported.
The March 19 quake is just one of the many earthquakes the Palmetto State experiences every year.
South Carolina is bisected by a number of fault lines that cause those temblors. Those formations are the lingering scars of seismic activities that slammed continents together, raised the Appalachians from the Earth and created the Atlantic Ocean.
And those wounds are far from healed.
“Once you form a fault, it never truly disappears,” said Steven Jaume, a professor of geology and seismology at the College of Charleston.
“ If you break anything, you can glue it back together,” Jaume explained. “But unless you happen to have glue that’s stronger than the original material, it’s gonna break in the same place that broke the first time.”
An earthquake hit near Lake Murray on March 19, 2026, making it the sixth recorded earthquake in the area in less than two months.
The coastal plain has historically been the most earthquake-active part of the state, according to the S.C. Department of Natural Resources. Much of that activity — including the 1886 earthquake, one of the deadliest natural disasters to strike South Carolina — has been clustered around the Summerville area.
The faults that run under the coast and Midlands are “inferred” faults. That means they require special equipment and techniques to detect, Jaume said, as the coastal plain’s sediments cover up most of the visual surface indicators.
“We usually can’t see them directly,” he explained.
“ In 1886, we don’t know exactly what moved because it did not break the Earth’s surface,” he added. “And if it doesn’t break the Earth’s surface, you can’t put your finger directly on it.”
Age is another major difference between coastal faults and their Upstate cousins, Jaume said. Many of the Upstate faults were formed when North America and Africa collided hundreds of millions of years ago, forcing the Appalachians skyward. As the two continents drifted apart, opening the Atlantic Ocean, newer fault lines began to form.
“We think the (younger faults) are being reactivated now underneath the Charleston area,” Jaume said.
The most recent temblor to strike the coastal area was a Magnitude 2 which occurred a few dozen miles offshore of McClellanville on March 13. It was the first offshore quake to hit the state in at least 20 years, according to a DNR database.
As to the Midlands swarm? It’s actually two distinct clusters — one centered in the Elgin area, and the other by Lake Murray. Jaume said both the Elgin and Lake Murray clusters appear to be the reactivation of a fault line. The March 19 quake was part of the Lake Murray cluster.
He added that it is possible for man-made reservoirs to spur earthquake activity, but that doesn’t appear to be the case with Lake Murray, which was constructed in the late 1920s. But that trend, called “Reservoir-induced Seismicity” has been documented at Lake Monticello, which was built for the VC Summer Nuclear Power Station.
“ When they put that one in, they had thousands of micro-earthquakes following the filling of that lake,” Jaume said. “And they periodically have swarms. There was one in fall of ‘21 and fall of ‘23.”
South Carolina’s fault lines fall into three categories. Strike-slip faults occur when plates move horizontally to one another. A thrust fault occurs when the plate above the fault slides up and over another. A standard fault causes the plate above the fault to slide lower than the opposing one.
South-Carolina
Why Tessa Johnson’s first South Carolina double-double meant so much to junior guard
COLUMBIA — Tessa Johnson giggled before she said, “This is going to sound very bad.
“But I’ve been trying to rebound this season, it just sometimes doesn’t work out for me and today it did.”
Johnson had first career double-double for South Carolina women’s basketball and found herself fielding questions about rebounding, a uncommon topic for the shooting guard.
She scored 14 points with her career-high 10 rebounds in the 103-34 victory over No. 16 seed Southern in the March Madness first-round game on March 21 in Colonial Life Arena.
It wasn’t that the junior guard woke up on the morning of her third Women’s NCAA Tournament opener and decided to start rebounding. But with a recent shooting slump, she was intentional about helping her team in other ways.
“I just wanted to do more than just scoring out there,” Johnson said. “I feel like I can do a little bit more out there and really wanted to focus on rebounding this game.”
Coach Dawn Staley’s top-seeded Gamecocks (32-3) will now play either No. 8 Clemson or No. 9 Southern Cal after Johnson’s contributions helped push them to the second round.
Johnson’s height at 6-feet does occasionally give her an advantage against some guards but given how frequently South Carolina runs in transition, it’s normally Johnson sprinting down the court instead of crashing the boards.
She leads the SEC in 3-point shooting at 44.1%, which is 10th in the nation.
Her signature spot-up shooting was highlighted on a grander scale in the 79-72 win over LSU on Feb. 14, when she started 4-of-5 in the first half, forcing Tigers coach Kim Mulkey to scream “Who can guard Tessa” at her team.
Johnson then went 10-of-34 across the next six games (29%).
To start the game against the Jaguars (20-14) it looked like Johnson hadn’t quite shaken off the slump, starting 0-of-2 from the 3-point line. She went to the locker room in the first quarter and returned three minutes later after taping two of her fingers.
She hit two 3-pointers in the third quarter and two in the fourth.
“Good I mean, there was like a cover on the hoop for everyone in the first half,” said Johnson when asked how breaking out of the 3-point slump felt. “The second half we picked it up defensively and I think that just helped us offensively.”
By halftime she was only three shy of tying her career-high in rebounds with seven, but grabbed four in the third quarter
“I wasn’t thinking about a double-double until I realized I was at eight points, eight rebounds but I really was just looking at my rebounding,” said Johnson, who is averaging a career-high 3.3. “I don’t rebound very well but now I’m getting up there.”
Lulu Kesin covers South Carolina athletics for The Greenville News and the USA TODAY Network. Email her at LKesin@usatodayco.com. Follow her on X@Lulukesin and Bluesky@bylulukesin.bsky.social
-
Detroit, MI4 days agoDrummer Brian Pastoria, longtime Detroit music advocate, dies at 68
-
Oklahoma1 week agoFamily rallies around Oklahoma father after head-on crash
-
Nebraska1 week agoWildfire forces immediate evacuation order for Farnam residents
-
Georgia7 days agoHow ICE plans for a detention warehouse pushed a Georgia town to fight back | CNN Politics
-
Alaska1 week agoPolice looking for man considered ‘armed and dangerous’
-
Science1 week agoFederal EPA moves to roll back recent limits on ethylene oxide, a carcinogen
-
Movie Reviews4 days ago‘Youth’ Twitter review: Ken Karunaas impresses audiences; Suraj Venjaramoodu adds charm; music wins praise | – The Times of India
-
World1 week agoThousands march worldwide in solidarity with Palestine, Iran on al-Quds Day