There’s only one real question heading into the CBS News Republican debate on Saturday: Can anyone stop Donald Trump?
The billionaire front-runner is coming off a big win in New Hampshire, has led polls in South Carolina for months, and enjoys an opposition that’s more divided than he could have hoped for, thanks to Sen. Marco Rubio’s debate choke and subsequent fifth-place finish in the Granite State.
The debate will be the best chance for everyone involved to either try to pry away Trump voters or build a coalition that can take him on in South Carolina, which votes February 20, and beyond. They have to do it quickly — if Trump is still winning primaries and the opposition is still divided three or four weeks from now, it will become extremely difficult to stop him from clinching the nomination or at least forcing a divided convention.
Trump, who occupied a similarly dominant position heading into last week’s debate in New Hampshire, responded at the time by laying low in the debate, sticking to his usual talking points about illegal immigration and trade, and avoiding gratuitous conflict.
When his campaign pulled a negative ad against Sen. Ted Cruz in South Carolina this week, opting instead for a play-it-safe run of positive spots, it looked like he would pursue the same strategy. But then he went on a Twitter rant against Cruz on Friday, even threatening to sue him over his eligibility to be president due to his Canadian birthplace. We’ll see which Trump shows up on Saturday night.
Cruz’s path to the nomination depends the most on him performing well in South Carolina and then a number of southern states on March 1. His campaign is already airing a tough anti-Trump ad targeting him over his failed attempt to take over an elderly widow’s home and turn the land into casino parking. Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush hit Trump over the same story in the last debate.
Bush has accused his rivals of not taking on Trump enough in debates and on the campaign trail, while candidates and Trump critics have accused Bush’s super PAC Right to Rise of spending tens of millions on ads attacking contenders like Rubio instead. A new spot from the group targets Trump’s “liberal Democratic positions” and highlights his offensive statements against women and a disabled reporter.
Rubio, who has mostly avoided getting in Trump’s way until recently, criticized Trump’s use of profanity and his lack of foreign policy knowledge this week, setting up possible points of confrontation in the debate.
“Negotiating a hotel deal in another country is not foreign policy experience,” Rubio said on Thursday.









