NewsPolitics

Actions

Watch: Trump heads to South Carolina to campaign for Gov. Henry McMaster

Posted at 8:03 PM, Jun 25, 2018
and last updated 2018-06-25 21:02:07-04

President Donald Trump on Monday will visit “famously hot” Columbia, South Carolina, where temperatures are expected to hover in the 90s for most of the day before he takes the stage at a rally for Gov. Henry McMaster.

Trump publicly backed McMaster after he was forced into a runoff election when he failed to clear 50% in a primary earlier this month.

Trump tweeted Monday, “Will be heading to one of my favorite places, South Carolina, to fight for one of my original ‘fighters,’ Governor Henry McMaster. Speaking at 7:00 P.M.”

Supporting McMaster has become an all-hands-on-deck effort from the Trump administration. Vice President Mike Pence ventured down to the conservative community of Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, on Saturday to appear with McMaster.

“I’m here because we stand with Gov. McMaster,” Pence told the crowd, adding, “The result of the policies that Gov. McMaster’s been there supporting every step of the way have been nothing short of remarkable.”

As his bid for governor proceeded to a Republican primary runoff against John Warren, a 39-year-old businessman and veteran, McMaster picked up the phone and called the President, asking for his support, according to a source familiar. Trump handily won the 2016 Republican presidential primary here.

One White House official described the “easy” decision to travel to the state for McMaster, saying, “He was an early and fervent supporter of President Trump’s.” This official previewed an upcoming schedule for the President that would include “more endorsements and events” now that many of the primaries have occurred.

This person said that Trump or Pence would probably be on the trail soon for Ron DeSantis, who is running for governor in Florida; and that there also would be some engagement from Trump with GOP gubernatorial candidate Scott Wagner in Pennsylvania.

McMaster was one of the first elected officials to endorse then-candidate Trump in 2016. McMaster was at the White House in late May, where he joined a few other Republican governors for dinner to discuss protecting the US border with Mexico. McMaster has pledged South Carolina National Guard troops to help with that effort.

Perhaps the only issue on which McMaster has publicly split from the Trump administration is offshore drilling on the coast of South Carolina. A spokesman for the governor told CNN earlier this year that McMaster had appealed to Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke about the issue.

McMaster said in a statement earlier this week, “President Trump and Vice President Pence are changing the world,” and that their willingness to campaign for him showed “a testament to the success of our great state.”

“They’ve stood by each other in the presidential race. They’re very like-minded individuals and they have a lot of the same priorities. I think that’s part of the reason why they have such a close relationship,” said campaign press secretary Carolina Anderegg. She said the two men speak “often” either personally or between their staffs. Trump called McMaster twice last week while he was on the stump.