Fresh off of Donald Trump's New Hampshire primary rout, arch-conservative rival Ted Cruz launched a sharp offensive Wednesday against the billionaire frontrunner. (File Photo)
Washington, United States:
Fresh off of Donald Trump's New Hampshire primary rout, arch-conservative rival Ted Cruz launched a sharp offensive Wednesday against the billionaire frontrunner, heralding a brutal battle for the next Republican contest in South Carolina.
The US senator from Texas, who won the Iowa caucuses last week and placed third Tuesday night in New Hampshire, wasted no time slinging mud against Trump as a fake conservative, as Cruz fights to be the evangelical and right-wing standardbearer for the 2016 Republican nomination.
"The only candidate who can beat Donald Trump is me," Cruz told reporters in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, where Republicans vote on February 20.
Cruz highlighted the "significant glaring differences" between the two on health care, stressing that Trump was keen on "adopting Bernie Sanders-style socialized medicine," a reference to the independent senator challenging Hillary Clinton for the Democratic nomination.
Trump and Cruz both say they want to dismantle President Barack Obama's Affordable Care Act, but Trump has been hammered by conservative rivals for expressing support years ago for universal health care.
The pair occupy the far-right lane in the crowded Republican nomination race, with a handful of more mainstream candidates -- Senator Marco Rubio, former Florida governor Jeb Bush, and Ohio Governor John Kasich who finished second in New Hampshire -- seeking to push them aside.
The real estate mogul has repeatedly taunted his rivals, saying those who wage war against him end up plunging in polls. But Cruz likely sees it as a necessity.
Trump leads in South Carolina with 36 percent support in the RealClearPolitics poll average. Cruz runs second at 20 percent, with Rubio well back in third, below 13 percent.
With Trump proving in New Hampshire that he can win over a broad coalition of Republicans and independent voters, and Cruz riding high among evangelicals and other social conservatives, the Trump-Cruz battle will be paramount, with mainstream candidates likely scrapping for bronze in South Carolina.
The first southern state to vote in the primaries is a rough-and-tumble political swamp.
Cruz told the Mike Gallagher radio show on Wednesday that "South Carolina is going to play a key role in choosing whether the Republican nominee is a proven conservative or simply a candidate who talks the talk on the trail but hasn't walked the walk."
Trump, scheduled to hold a Wednesday night rally in the state, meanwhile unleashed a South Carolina campaign ad criticizing Cruz as "the worst king of Washington insider who just can't be trusted."
The US senator from Texas, who won the Iowa caucuses last week and placed third Tuesday night in New Hampshire, wasted no time slinging mud against Trump as a fake conservative, as Cruz fights to be the evangelical and right-wing standardbearer for the 2016 Republican nomination.
"The only candidate who can beat Donald Trump is me," Cruz told reporters in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, where Republicans vote on February 20.
Cruz highlighted the "significant glaring differences" between the two on health care, stressing that Trump was keen on "adopting Bernie Sanders-style socialized medicine," a reference to the independent senator challenging Hillary Clinton for the Democratic nomination.
Trump and Cruz both say they want to dismantle President Barack Obama's Affordable Care Act, but Trump has been hammered by conservative rivals for expressing support years ago for universal health care.
The pair occupy the far-right lane in the crowded Republican nomination race, with a handful of more mainstream candidates -- Senator Marco Rubio, former Florida governor Jeb Bush, and Ohio Governor John Kasich who finished second in New Hampshire -- seeking to push them aside.
The real estate mogul has repeatedly taunted his rivals, saying those who wage war against him end up plunging in polls. But Cruz likely sees it as a necessity.
Trump leads in South Carolina with 36 percent support in the RealClearPolitics poll average. Cruz runs second at 20 percent, with Rubio well back in third, below 13 percent.
With Trump proving in New Hampshire that he can win over a broad coalition of Republicans and independent voters, and Cruz riding high among evangelicals and other social conservatives, the Trump-Cruz battle will be paramount, with mainstream candidates likely scrapping for bronze in South Carolina.
The first southern state to vote in the primaries is a rough-and-tumble political swamp.
Cruz told the Mike Gallagher radio show on Wednesday that "South Carolina is going to play a key role in choosing whether the Republican nominee is a proven conservative or simply a candidate who talks the talk on the trail but hasn't walked the walk."
Trump, scheduled to hold a Wednesday night rally in the state, meanwhile unleashed a South Carolina campaign ad criticizing Cruz as "the worst king of Washington insider who just can't be trusted."
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