Wednesday, June 23, 2010

SC: Haley & Scott Win, Inglis Ousted

In Tuesday's South Carolina Republican gubernatorial primary, as expected, state Rep. Nikki Haley (R) cruised to a 65-35 victory over Rep. Gresham Barrett (R). Haley is heavily favored to defeat state Sen. Vincent Sheheen (D) in the general election and make history as South Carolina's first non-white-male governor.

Everyone's making a lot of hay over the diversity she brings to the GOP, and how--as a conservative Indian-American woman governor from a deep south state--she will be at the top of everyone's VP short list even as early as 2012.

And speaking of 2012, its clear that this was also a big win for potential 2012 hopefuls Sarah Palin and Mitt Romney, who endorsed Haley at critical times in her campaign.

Romney endorsed her back when she was "Nikki who?", as she likes to say, and stuck in single digits. He also donated $42,000 to her campaign from various PACs and campaigned with her in person for her runoff bid.

Palin, meanwhile, joined former South Carolina first lady Jenny Sanford in endorsing Haley at a critical time, immediately launching her into frontrunner status. And Palin stood by her side when Haley was accused of infidelity by swatting down the claims. Haley, for her part, actually gave a shout-out to Palin in her victory speech: "She gave us that boost we needed when we needed it."

So if Haley becomes governor, and both Romney and Palin run in 2012, its hard to say who she would endorse in the all-important South Carolina primary. She might just stay out of it completely, given that she owes both of these national GOP figures a huge favor.

Anyway, back to 2010. In South Carolina's 1st district GOP runoff, state Rep. Tim Scott (R) handily defeated Paul (son of Strom) Thurmond (R) 68% to 32%. Scott--who was endorsed by the entire House GOP leadership, the Club for Growth, Sarah Palin, and more--will likely go on to become the first black member of the GOP House caucus since J.C. Watts of Oklahoma retired in 2002.

In the 3rd district race to succeed now unemployed Gresham Barrett, state Rep. Jeff Duncan (R) came back to narrowly defeat businessman Richard Cash (R) in the runoff, to the tune of 51.5% to 48.5%. Duncan also had the support of the Club for Growth and was the favorite despite finishing a surprise second to Cash in the first round of voting, while Cash wasn't even supposed to make the runoff.

And finally, in the 4th district, Rep. Bob Inglis (R) was humiliated last night by a 71-29 loss to Spartanburg County Solicitor Trey Gowdy (R), a Tea Party favorite. Inglis was a little too moderate and a little too willing to compromise with Democrats for this dark red district during his time in Congress. He is the third House member and the fifth member of Congress to get ousted in a primary this year.

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