If political advertising won elections, Republican presidential hopeful would be completely crushing it in South Carolina against . But it doesn't.Haley and supporting groups have outspent the former president nearly 15-to-1 ahead of the first in the south primary contest on Saturday. They have put about $15 million into ad buys while Trump's campaign and supporting groups have spent a fraction of that at just over $1 million. But in the days before the primary, the former president was leading Haley in polling by double-digits. The USA Today/Suffolk poll of likely Republican primary voters had Trump at 63 percent while Haley was at 35 percent in her home state.
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