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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Republican feud escalates; SC Gov. Haley backs Rubio

Steve Peoples Associated Press

CHAPIN, S.C. – A three-way feud among the GOP’s leading White House contenders escalated Wednesday, with Republican Ted Cruz daring Donald Trump to sue him and dismissing Marco Rubio’s charges of dishonesty just days before South Carolina’s high-stakes primary.

Yet it was Rubio who may have scored the day’s biggest win as he secured the coveted endorsement of South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley.

“If we elect Marco Rubio, every day will be a great day in America,” she said alongside the Florida senator during a rally in suburban Columbia.

Haley’s endorsement did little to quiet the clash between Cruz, Trump and Rubio over alleged ethical violations in the days leading up to Saturday’s South Carolina contest.

The Texas senator has been trying to beat back charges of dishonesty from Trump and Rubio for weeks. He shifted his defense to the next level during a news conference that highlighted Cruz’s extensive legal training.

“You have been threatening frivolous lawsuits for your entire adult life,” said Cruz, a Harvard Law School graduate, speaking directly to Trump. “Even in the annals of frivolous lawsuits, this takes the cake.”

Trump threatened earlier in the week to bring a lawsuit against Cruz over a TV ad that attacks Trump’s conservative bona fides. The ad features footage of the businessman in a 1999 interview supporting abortion rights. Trump now says he opposes abortion.

Trump’s attorney sent Cruz a letter Tuesday charging the ad was “replete with outright lies, false, defamatory and destructive statements.”

Cruz on Wednesday said a lawsuit against the ad has no chance.

Polls suggest Trump continues to hold a lead in South Carolina, as Cruz works to rally the Republican Party’s most conservative wing and Rubio tries to gain mainstream voters. Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and Ohio Gov. John Kasich continue to battle for a spot at the table, while Ben Carson struggles for relevancy.

Haley’s endorsement was a major setback for Bush in particular, who told NBC News on Monday that “she is the probably the most meaningful endorsement if there is” one in the state.

Bush on Wednesday said her decision left him “disappointed.” At one point during a Summerville campaign stop, Bush mimicked pundits suggesting the race is over.

“It’s all decided, we don’t have to go vote, I guess, it’s all finished,” Bush told the crowd in remarks circulated by rival campaigns. “I should stop campaigning maybe, huh? It’s all done. That’s not how democracy works.”

Rubio continued his assault against Cruz’s campaign tactics. He accused Cruz supporters of using “push polls” and creating a fake Facebook page wrongly claiming that South Carolina Rep. Trey Gowdy had switched his endorsement from the Florida senator to Cruz.

“It’s just a pattern of people around his campaign that have continuously done things like that,” Rubio said as he campaigned in Mount Pleasant.

Cruz denied being involved with anything untoward and called for anyone with evidence to come forward.

Trump and Rubio are “repeatedly putting forth fabrications with no evidence, no basis whatsoever, just trying to throw mud and attack,” Cruz said. “The insults and the falsehoods and the fabrications have no business in politics. It is incumbent upon all of us to speak the truth.”

Meanwhile, Trump again called Cruz a liar making desperate moves to boost his campaign.

“I am pro-life and I do not support taxpayer funding for Planned Parenthood as long as they are performing abortions,” Trump said in a statement.

The New York real estate mogul also repeated his threat to bring a lawsuit over Cruz’s eligibility to be on the ballot, given that he was born in Canada. Cruz and legal experts have said he is eligible because his mother was a United States citizen at the time of his birth.

“Time will tell, Teddy,” Trump said.