This article**[Privy Council No. 10];
The Republican primary basically maintained the pattern of Trump's "lying to win".
Former South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley was battered in South Carolina last weekend, losing by 20 percentage points to Trump on her "home turf."
And Trump has won five wars.
The New York Times described on the 25th that after the defeat of South Carolina, when Nikki Haley walked to the front of the stage to face the voters, "her expression was very gloomy, and for a moment, she felt as if she was ready to withdraw from the race for the Republican nomination."
Then she gave her reasons for running, "We need to beat Joe Biden in November", "I don't believe Donald Trump can beat Joe Biden".
Republican pollster Matthews pointed out that most recent polls show that Haley will have a greater chance of winning than Trump if he has the opportunity to face off against Biden.
But Haley first had to win a vote of confidence from the Republican Party.
But Republicans don't care," Matthews said, "and I think they're convinced that Trump will defeat Biden."
Why do Republicans prefer Trump?
On the 26th, Wall Street ** tried to answer this question with "educational attainment".
An NBC News poll found that about 69 percent of Republicans across the U.S. who said they would vote in this year's primary or caucus — a staggering number — did not have a four-year college degree, up from 51 percent in 2015. In that 2015 poll, Wall Street** was a partner.
According to the Associated Press Votecast, these voters without college degrees are increasingly represented in the Republican Party and are a major source of vote for Trump: He won 71 percent of the group's vote in South Carolina and more than 60 percent in both the New Hampshire primary and the Iowa party election.
In contrast, Haley was more favorable among college-educated voters, with Trump losing to Haley in two of South Carolina's three most populous counties (Charleston and Richland) and Beaufort. These three counties are the only ones in the state with a college degree and residents who make up at least 40 percent of the adult population.
The Associated Press Votecast also found that Trump was less likely to receive less votes than Haley among voters with graduate degrees and among voters with annual household incomes of $100,000 or more.
But the share of those voters in the Republican Party has been shrinking, and in NBC polls, the percentage of voters who attended college has fallen to 31 percent of Republican primaries.
"The reason why Trump is doing so well is obvious, because he has created a voter base," the analyst said. ”
Trump is closer to the goal of single-handing Biden.
The New York Times gave the reason for Trump's primary victory: He is getting easier.
While in New Hampshire, the article said, his victory speech "displayed all the grace and manners of a professional wrestler, and he mocked Haley's dress and ridiculed her defeat." He also threatened that anyone who donated to Haley's campaign would be "permanently barred from participating in the MAGA (Make America Great Again)" operation.
And after his victory in South Carolina, Mr. Trump did not even mention Haley by name, and he did not even slander Haley's voters or threaten her political donors.
And the sign that Haley's general trend has gone is that several American media such as "Politics" broke the news that after the defeat in South Carolina, the conservative group "Operation Americans for Prosperity", supported by billionaire Koch's family, told employees to stop funding Haley.
Despite all the harsh language used by many in the United States and Europe to mock Trump's rudeness, the former who started out in real estate, as a member of the top elite in the United States, has indeed succeeded in representing the uneducated, generally low-income white American community.
Will America be great again? It's hard to say. But it's possible that American voters will make Trump try "Make America Great" again.