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            Nikki Haley forced into runoff in South Carolina primary  
            Washington, June 9, 2010  
            Overcoming accusations of   marital infidelity, Indian American lawmaker Nikki Haley just missed the   50-percent threshold in a four-way primary race for the Republican   nomination for South Carolina governor's job. 
            Forced into a runoff Tuesday, she will now compete with Republican   Representative Gresham Barrett on June 22 for the chance to face   Democrat Vincent Sheheen in November. If she wins then, she would become   the state's first female chief executive and second Indian American   governor of a US state after Republican Bobby Jindal, who holds the top   job in Louisiana.  
               
              Haley secured 49 percent of the vote with 95 percent of precincts   reporting. Barrett, who represents South Carolina's 3rd Congressional   District, won 22 percent of the vote in a race that was peppered with   scandal.  
               
              Republican opponent Lt. Gov Andre Bauer had 17 percent of the vote while   Attorney General Henry McMaster received 12 percent.  
               
"We had the kitchen sink thrown at us," Haley said in an interview with   the New York Times Tuesday. "We are a state of great people. We are a   state of dirty politics," she said portraying the unsubstantiated   charges of extramarital affairs as retaliation for taking on special   interests.  
   
  Haley had been polling at the back of the pack until she picked up an   endorsement by former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin last month. But she   was forced to face accusations of not one, but two, trysts with men   heavily involved in state Republican politics.  
               
              First, blogger and former Haley communications consultant Will Folks   claimed he had a relationship with the 38-year-old mother of two. Then,   consultant Larry Marchant, who was working for Bauer until last week,   claimed he had a one-night stand with Haley.  
               
              Neither offered evidence of an affair. Bauer had challenged Haley, who   denies all the allegations, to take a lie detector test. When she did   not, Bauer took the test himself. He released results on Monday that he   said shows he wasn't behind Marchant's claims.  
               
              Current South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford, who cannot run for   re-election because of term limits, admitted last year to having an   extramarital affair with a woman in Argentina. The scandal led to his   divorce, but he kept his job.  
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