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Tim Scott

Tim Scott running for president in 2024: How will he challenge Donald Trump?

NORTH CHARLESTON, S.C. − Tim Scott, the lone Black Republican senator who showcases himself as a “sunrise” conservative, declared his campaign for president Monday by saying he can revive a nation that is receding from greatness.

“Every single one of us are here because of an American journey where there were obstacles that became opportunities,” Scott said in kicking off a historic and underdog bid. “But unfortunately, under President Biden, our nation is retreating away from patriotism and faith.”

Scott joins an expanding field of GOP contenders looking to knock out Donald Trump, the former president who remains a muscular front-runner despite qualms that he isn't the best to challenge President Joe Biden, the Democratic incumbent.

Trump went easy on Scott during his announcement day, using the latest entrant in the 2024 presidential race to bash another prospective GOP candidate, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.

In wishing "good luck" to Scott, Trump said in a Truth Social post that the race "is rapidly loading up with lots of people." He added that "Tim is a big step up from Ron DeSanctimonious, who is totally unelectable."

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Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., announces the launch of his presidential campaign at Buccaneer Field House on the campus of Charleston Southern University in North Charleston, S.C. on Monday.

In planning their campaign, Scott and his team see this race as a marathon and exude confidence based on a combination of his biography and fundraising despite hovering at roughly 2% in primary polls.

The South Carolina senator has leaned into a narrative that oozes optimism despite being the grandson of a Black man who once picked cotton.

"We live in the land where it is possible for a kid raised in poverty by a single mother in a small apartment to one day serve in the People’s House and maybe even the White House,” Scott said during his announcement speech at Charleston Southern University.

During a multistate tour after forming an exploratory committee in April, he has held up the twin pillars of faith and education as a guiding light to overcome personal hardships that Scott says is a blueprint to his governing philosophy.

A deeper look:Tim Scott, a Christian 'above all other things': How a Ten Commandments fight shaped him

'A culture of greatness'

Supporters who ventured to the Field House at Charleston Southern to hear Scott cited his life story as his best credential.

“He came from a family with nothing and went to Washington,” said longtime Republican voter and Charleston County resident Steven Rubin, 79, who attended the event with his wife Toni, 67.

Steven said, “We should be very proud.”

The Scott campaign trotted out a prominent endorser at the event: Sen. John Thune, R-S.D., the Senate's number two Republican.

“I don’t know about you but I think our country is ready to be inspired,” Thune told the crowd.  

Scott surmounted technical difficulties, including a dead mike at one point, to attack the "radical left" for causing problems.

"The radical left is pushing us into a culture of grievance instead of a culture of greatness," he said at one point.

Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., greets and hugs supporters after announcing the launch of his presidential campaign at Buccaneer Field House on the campus of Charleston Southern University in North Charleston, S.C. on Monday.

Scott enters 2024 contest with deep pockets

One advantage Scott brings to the table compared to others is being flush with campaign cash coupled with the reputation as a prolific fundraiser.

Scott has squirreled away roughly $22 million, which aides tout as the most of any presidential candidate in U.S. history. That positions the senator to be one of the few GOP contenders who can message widely to voters as a serious Trump challenger.

The campaign has launched a roughly $6 million ad buy starting with a $5.5 million drop in Iowa and New Hampshire this week and will run through the first Republican presidential debate in late August.

Scott proved to be a formidable fundraiser during the 2022 midterm elections when he raked in about $43.1 million for his reelection, according to the Federal Election Commission. And a Scott-aligned super PAC, Opportunity Matters Fund Action, has almost matched that figure, raising about $37.3 million, according to OpenSecrets.

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Tackling Trump and talking race in America

Scott often talks about his racial heritage on the campaign trail, using an ad that has blasted Biden and the Democrats for promoting "victimhood" over "personal responsibility."

He famously said the U.S. is "not a racist country" and has gone as far as to argue his political opponents are guilty of "indoctrinating our children to believe we live in an evil country." 

What's left to be seen, however, is how Scott plans to challenge Trump directly as many Republicans argue will be necessary to convince base voters to abandon the former president.

"He's still the 800-pound gorilla," former Republican Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, a longtime Trump critic, told USA TODAY.

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"I'll say this, there are a bunch of candidates out there that can't decide what to say about Trump and whether they like him or not, they change their mind, flip-flop," he added. "No one should be in the race unless you know if they're going to be afraid to directly take on Trump because that's what it's going to take."

Scott peppered Trump with criticism during his presidency, such as when he said the former president's "moral authority" had been "compromised" after Trump said that “many sides” were to blame for the violence during a 2017 neo-Nazi rally in Charlottesville, Virginia.

Advisers −who didn't mention Trump specifically − added how some of the cultures of victimhood and grievance exist on the right as well, adding how Scott plans to call out those instances.

During a "Faith in America" town hall in New Hampshire earlier this month, many believed Scott was alluding to Trump when he said: "The seeds of greatness, not the seeds of grievance, is our future."

Contributing: Devyani Chhetri, Greenville News

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