Trump to face rival for Republican nomination

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
By Philip Whiteside, international news reporter A former state governor has become the first person to say he will challenge Donald Trump
for the Republican nomination for president.William Weld, 73, announced he was taking on the incumbent with appearances on TV news channels
and in simultaneously published magazine interviews overnight.He said: "It is time to return to the principles of Lincoln - equality,
dignity and opportunity for all."There is no greater cause on earth than to preserve what truly makes America great
I am ready to lead that fight."The ex-Massachusetts governor, who is known as Bill, last won an election in 1994 when he was re-elected with
a landslide despite it being a Democrat state.He ran again for the governorship in 1996 but lost to John Kerry and tried again
unsuccessfully in 2005 in New York.Image:Bill Weld was the vice-presidential candidate for the Libertarian Party in 2016In 2016, he was the
vice presidential nominee for the Libertarian Party - a right-wing party that espouses free market principles and personal freedom.His
challenge will be the first time an incumbent president has faced a notable primary bid since George HW Bush in 1992Mr Weld faces an uphill
task - while Mr Trump's overall approval ratings have been poor, he remains popular with Republican voters.Trump faces ongoing legal
threatsThe Republican National Committee (RNC) has issued a nonbinding resolution declaring the party's undivided support for Mr Trump.His
nation in "grave peril" and his priorities were "skewed toward promotion of himself rather than for the good of the country".He has a
reputation for cracking down on corruption, having been a counsel, along with Hillary Clinton (then Hillary Rodham), in the house judiciary
committee during the Watergate impeachment hearings.As US Attorney for Massachusetts in the early 1980s he led a raft of anti-corruption
cases before being promoted to the US Justice Department in Washington.He remains a friend of the Clintons and endorsed Barack Obama against
John McCain in 2008, although later said he regretted it.As a Libertarian, he is likely to target disaffected Republicans and independents
who share his disdain for the president and his values of anti-authoritarian government, free trade and free markets, and personal freedom.