COLUMBIA, S.C. – Hoping to rebound from New Hampshire’s crushing fifth-place finish, Sen. Marco Rubio’s campaign is preparing to finish third in South Carolina.
“To leave here in the top tier would a really nice comeback,” a Rubio aide said, adding that some internal polling suggested it could even be a close race for second.
But critics – especially the Ted Cruz campaign – suggest that spinning a third-place finish into a “victory” is questionable, especially after Rubio netted the endorsements of Gov. Nikki Haley, Sen. Tim Scott and U.S. Rep. Trey Gowdy.
Full coverage of the race for the White House: Decision 2016
“He’s got the top three endorsements in the state,” said Alice Stewart, a Cruz spokeswoman. “If he can’t win here, the question is: how can he win anywhere else?”
The Rubio campaign counters that it’s still a six-person race.
“This is still a very crowded field,” Rubio said on NBC’s TODAY. “I think once you get this race down to 2, 3 or 4 people, you’re going to have a much clearer, more traditional campaign.”
The brutal attacks between Rubio and Cruz over the past few days show just how intense the competition for being the “anti-Trump” candidate has become.
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