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On 2024 South Carolina GOP primary election day, does former Gov. Nikki Haley have the pull to beat Trump?

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Washington — Nikki Haley appears poised to lose in her home state as she goes up against former President Donald Trump in South Carolina’s 2024 Republican primary on Saturday, but she has vowed to press forward in the GOP nomination contest whatever the outcome

A home-state advantage hasn’t translated into a lead in the polls for the former U.N. ambassador and governor of South Carolina, who has argued that Trump faces an electability problem, given his legal troubles, and surrounds himself with chaos. Nearly two-thirds of likely GOP primary voters said in a recent CBS News poll before the primary that they would vote for Trump, with Haley trailing by double digits. 

A number of South Carolina politicians, whose careers were once helped by Haley’s support, are backing Trump. The former president also benefits from the state’s conservative evangelical voter base. 

Still, Haley predicted it would be a “close” and “competitive” race and has vowed to stay in the competition for the long haul, framing it as a race between David and Goliath. 

“Dropping out would be the easy route,” she said Tuesday in a major speech in Greenville, South Carolina, announcing she had no plans to end her campaign. “I’ve been the underdog in every race I’ve ever run. I’ve always been David taking on Goliath. And like David, I’m not just fighting someone bigger than me. I’m fighting for something bigger than myself.” 

In the days leading up to the primary, Haley has intensified her criticism of Trump, accusing him of emboldening Russian President Vladimir Putin after the former president said he would encourage Russia to do “whatever the hell they want” to any NATO country that doesn’t meet defense spending obligations. 

“What he just did was put all of our allies in danger and every military service person who’s serving,” she said Monday in Camden, South Carolina. “I don’t know why he keeps getting weak in the knees when it comes to Russia.” 

She has also accused Trump of trying to “take” the 2024 election by endorsing his daughter-in-law to serve as co-chair of the Republican National Committee. 

In Tuesday’s speech, Haley called Trump “unstable and unhinged,” said he’s “getting meaner and more offensive” and is “taking out his anger on others.” 

Trump has returned the jabs. 

His campaign characterized Haley as a “wailing loser hell-bent on an alternative reality.” While campaigning in the state earlier this month, Trump mocked Haley over the absence of her husband, who is deployed with the South Carolina Army National Guard in Africa. 

When is the 2024 South Carolina Republican primary?

South Carolina’s Republican primary is scheduled for Saturday, Feb. 24. It follows the Iowa caucuses and New Hampshire primary, which were both held in January, and Nevada’s primary and caucuses earlier this month. 

Democrats held their primary in South Carolina on Feb. 3, and President Biden defeated two long-shot candidates

The dates were each decided by the political parties. 

When will polls open and close for the South Carolina primary?

Polls will be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. ET. Voters who are in line when polls close at 7 p.m. will be allowed to cast their ballots. 

Voters can find their polling place here

How were Haley and Trump polling in South Carolina before the 2024 primary?

Before Saturday, Trump held a big advantage over Haley, who served as South Carolina governor from 2011 to 2017 before joining the Trump administration, according to the latest CBS News polling, with over than double the support Haley had among likely GOP primary voters, 65%-30%. Three-quarters of voters said it made “no difference” that Haley is from South Carolina in determining whether they would vote for her. 

Polling before the primary also showed that her arguments against Trump weren’t resonating. A majority of voters didn’t see Trump’s legal fights as a reason to back Haley and saw her criticism of his mental fitness as unfair.

What’s the current Republican delegate count?

Heading into the South Carolina primary, Trump had an estimated 63 delegates, compared to Haley’s 17 delegates. Fifty delegates are up for grabs in South Carolina. 

Nidia Cavazos and Olivia Rinaldi contributed reporting. 



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News details emerge about Utah mother, 3 young children killed at their home

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A Utah mother who police believe was shot and killed by her husband along with three of their children was a refugee who fled violence in Myanmar and dreamed of thriving with her family in the U.S., relatives said Thursday.

Police believe the husband killed his family before shooting himself, and a teenage son was badly wounded.

The bodies of Bu Meh, 38, along with her daughters Kristina Ree, 8, and Nyay Meh, 2, and son Boe Reh, 11, were found in their home in West Valley City, a Salt Lake City suburb, on Tuesday. A handgun was found under the father Dae Reh, 42, leading police to believe this was a murder-suicide, but no evidence of a motive has been released.

One child, 17-year-old Sha Reh, survived being shot in the head and is hospitalized with a severe brain injury, police said.

Bu Meh, a member of Myanmar’s Karenni ethnic minority, fled what her relatives described as ethnic cleansing in the Southeast Asian nation about 10 years ago. She and her small family lived for a time in a refugee camp in Thailand, then came to the United States “with little more than the clothing on their backs,” the family said in a statement.

She taught herself English, learned new skills and worked hard to support her growing family, achieving a way of life “far beyond the nightmare of her former country or the refugee camp,” the family said.

“For reasons that we cannot comprehend, her husband robbed her and their children of that security and their very lives,” her family said.

Police believe the shooting happened over the weekend.

Police initially went to the home Monday night after a relative asked them to check on the family but did not find any sign of an emergency that would allow them to enter the home. The relative went to the home Tuesday, saw Sha Reh wounded in the garage and called police, who found the bodies inside the home.

In their statement, relatives called Sha Reh their hero and said he faces a “long and complex road to recovery.” An online fundraiser is collecting donations to pay for his care and to help him go to college.

“After moving into their own home and finally enjoying a level of prosperity far beyond the nightmare of their former country or the refugee camp in Thailand in which they lived for a season, and for reasons that we cannot comprehend,” the family wrote, “her husband robbed her and their children of that security and their very lives.”

Neighbors hadn’t reported any gunshots in the area over the weekend, police spokesperson Roxeanne Vainuku said at a news conference Wednesday. The family had no previous reports of domestic violence or other disturbances.

One neighbor spoke to CBS affiliate KUTV about the shock they felt.

“How can a father shoot his children?” neighbor Mike Webster told the station. “I just can’t grasp for that concept at all. I can just see that poor little two-year-old looking at her daddy.”

This Utah case is the 38th mass killing in the United States this year. At least 165 people have died this year in U.S. mass killings, which are defined by the FBI as cases in which four or more people die within a 24-hour period, not including the killer.

Mark Barden, whose child was killed in the 2012 Sandy Hook school shooting, urged Utah lawmakers to pass Red Flag laws after the incident in Utah, KUTV reported.

“When it is recognized that an individual is in crisis, measures to safely and temporarily remove firearms from their possession are proven to save lives,” Barden said.





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Two journalists killed in northern Syria

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A journalists’ association says two journalists working for Kurdish media outlets were killed in northern Syria while covering fighting between Turkish-backed fighters and Syrian Kurdish militia.

The Turkey-based Dicle-Firat Journalists Association said Friday that Nazim Dastan and Cihan Bilgin were killed Thursday when their vehicle was reportedly targeted by a Turkish drone on a road near the Tishrin Dam.

Tishrin Dam, located some 56 miles east of Aleppo, has been the scene of clashes between the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces, SDF, and the Turkey-backed opposition forces.


Former U.S. ambassador to Turkey says Trump is exaggerating the country’s influence on Syria

04:34

There was no immediate comment from Turkish officials.

Bianet, a news website dedicated to human rights issues, said Bilgin was a reporter for the Kurdish Hawar News Agency, while Dastan worked as a freelance journalist for the Firat News Agency, which is associated with the militant group, the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

Turkey considers the SDF a terrorist organization because its main component is a group aligned to the PKK.

The group has been engaged in an armed struggle against the Turkish state since the 1980s in pursuit of its objective of securing autonomy for Kurds in the country.



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Stuffing stockings with skincare? Here’s what experts say kids should (and shouldn’t) be using.

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Skin care is all the rage for teens and tweens these days. But if you’re hunting for last-minute skincare stocking stuffers, be aware that experts warn some products could cause more harm than good.

Dr. Sheilagh Maguiness, a dermatologist and president of Society for Pediatric Dermatology told CBS News earlier this year it’s important to look for age-appropriate products for young skin. 

“What’s not good about caring for your skin, washing your face, wanting to establish good healthy skin care habits early? That’s great,” Maguiness said. “But what’s not great is the fact that some of the products that are being marketed to tweens and teens are not necessarily good or appropriate for their skin.”

So if you’re deciding on skincare gifts, here’s what’s safe and what’s best to skip. 

Safe: Cleanser and sun protection 

Using a gentle cleanser once or twice a day to wash your face is a great first step for those around age 11 or 12, Maguiness said.

“Even tweens could wash their face twice a day; as young as 8, that would be just fine,” she said. 

After washing your face in the morning, Maguiness suggests applying a sunscreen with SPF 30 or greater. Then in the evening, swap that out for a gentle moisturizer.

“The only preventative product that you need in an arsenal at any age is sunscreen,” she said. “It is the No. 1 thing you can do to prevent your skin from aging and to prevent, even more importantly, the risk for skin cancer down the line.”

Skip: Harsh ingredients

Some harsh ingredients for young people to avoid include alpha and beta hydroxy acids (AHA and BHA), alcohol, highly fragranced products, and retinols and retinoids, plastic surgeon Dr. Smita Ramanadham, told CBS New York earlier this year. 

“The biggest category to really avoid are those anti-aging products,” she said. “Young skin just does not need it. Young skin has collagen, elastin, it is hydrated, so we don’t need to add these extra ingredients that are really going to irritate and cause inflammation.”

Maguiness said she sees young girls come into her clinic with bags of unnecessary and potentially risky products.

“They’re actually damaging their skin barrier. They’re drying themselves out. They’re getting irritant dermatitis,” she said. “They’re using products that really just aren’t appropriate for the type of skin that they have.”



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