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Fort Worth Mayor Mattie Parker called Nikki Haley an inspiring candidate with a vision for the future.
hmantas@star-telegram.com
Fort Worth Mayor Mattie Parker bucked the trend of most prominent Texas politicians by endorsing former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley for president.
Parker introduced Haley at a packed rally Monday at Tannehill’s Tavern in the Stockyards. She called the former South Carolina governor’s message a hopeful vision for the future.
“Each of you are here because you’re voting for someone, not against the status quo,” Parker said. She called Haley inspirational, adding that Haley inspires people to be better together.
Gov. Greg Abbott, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, U.S. Sens. Ted Cruz and John Cornyn and several North Texas congressional representatives support former President Donald Trump.
However, prominent Fort Worth Republicans including Parker, former Mayor Betsy Price, and former Fort Worth city council member Steve Murrin have all shown support for Haley.
Price, who spoke to the Star-Telegram before introducing Haley at a February event in Dallas, said Haley is more of a public servant than a politician.
“I’m just really not sure we need somebody that’s got all that baggage,” Price said.
Haley’s visit to Fort Worth comes on the eve of Super Tuesday, where 15 states, including Texas, will hold primary elections.
Haley trails Trump by a tally of 244 delegates to 43. They each need 1,215 delegates to win the nomination.
She’s also behind Trump in the latest University of Houston poll, with 80% supporting Trump and 19% supporting Haley.
Still, people at Monday’s rally said they are supporting Haley for her ability to bring people together. Several blamed Trump for divisions in the Republican party and argued that Haley would stand a better chance of beating President Joe Biden in the general election in November.
Cathy Hartman, 66, said she supported Trump in 2016 at a time when the country needed his style of what she called raw truth.
“I think it’s kind of falling on deaf ears now. It’s not sexy anymore,” Hartman said.
Patrice Lucas, a retired nurse from Fort Worth, was more blunt in her assessment of Trump.
“I don’t want someone who is old and facing jail time, and it would be nice if someone could speak in complete sentences,” Lucas said.
She also said she’s tired of the toxic political culture embodied by Trump, who often focuses on bashing his political opponents rather than talking about policy to make the country better.
Haley picked up on that point in her stump speech, referencing the way Trump lashed out at her after she secured 43% of the vote in the New Hampshire Republican primary.
“All he’s doing is talking about himself, and the thing is, this isn’t about him. This is about the American people,” Haley said, drawing booming applause from the roughly 1,000 people gathered Monday.
Haley’s speech was interrupted at least a dozen times by protesters calling for a ceasefire in Israel’s war against Hamas. While the crowd chanted her name to drown out the protesters, Haley urged her supporters to be civil.
“My husband and his military brothers and sisters sacrifice every day for their right to be able to (protest),” she said.
Haley ended her speech with a call to normalcy. Biden calling his opponents fascists and Trump calling his opponents vermin is not normal, Haley said.
She noted that many young Americans can’t afford to buy a house and believe their children will be worse off.
“If you join this movement, if you make your voices heard, I promise you our best days are yet to come,” she said.
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Nikki Haley won her first Republican primary contest of the 2024 election on Sunday in Washington, D.C. The win earned her 19 delegates and the title of the first woman to win a Republican primary in history.
Haley won 62 percent of the vote compared to Trump’s 33 percent. A mere 2,035 voters participated in the primary contest which will likely represent the only win for the former South Carolina governor heading into Super Tuesday (North Dakota holds their GOP primary today).
The former President had just come off a clean sweep of GOP primaries in Idaho, Michigan, and Missouri on Saturday. He is expected to sweep once again on Super Tuesday when 15 more states are up for grabs.
“It’s not surprising that Republicans closest to Washington dysfunction are rejecting Donald Trump and all his chaos,” Haley spokesperson Olivia Perez-Cubas said in a statement.
With Super Tuesday fast approaching, Trump sits at 244 delegates to Haley’s 43 with 1,215 needed for the GOP nomination. 854 delegates will be at stake on March 5th.
Donald Trump, the presumptive Republican nominee for President, seemingly took the loss to Haley in stride. In fact, his campaign had a blast in responding to the news.
“Tonight’s results in Washington D.C. reaffirm the object of President Trump’s campaign — he will drain the swamp and put America first,” Karoline Leavitt, Trump’s Campaign Press Secretary said in a statement.
“While Nikki has been soundly rejected throughout the rest of America, she was just crowned Queen of the Swamp by the lobbyists and DC insiders that want to protect the failed status quo,” Leavitt added. “The swamp has claimed their queen.”
There aren’t too many political pundits who think Nikki Haley’s win in Washington, D.C. will change the momentum of the race. The fact that Trump’s campaign has already turned it into a liability for her is evidence of that.
“President Trump will fight for every American who is being let down by these very DC insiders and devastated by Joe Biden’s failures,” added Leavitt.
RELATED: Nikki Haley Blames Trump for Low Military Recruitment Numbers: ‘Very Sad State Of Affairs’
Nikki Haley celebrated her GOP primary victory in Washington, D.C. in a post on the X social media platform.
“Let’s do it. Thank you, DC!” she wrote. “We fight for every inch.”
A moral victory in the cesspool of American politics is, most assuredly, little more than an inch in Haley’s flailing campaign.
Trump, meanwhile, took to his own social media platform to also celebrate Haley’s win, using one of his nicknames for her in the process.
“I purposely stayed away from the D.C. Vote because it is the ‘Swamp,’ with very few delegates, and no upside,” Trump maintains. “Birdbrain spent all of her time, money and effort there.”
Trump, in a separate post, urged Republican voters to deliver a resounding victory over Nikki Haley on Super Tuesday and on March 12th.
“Each of you is going to have the opportunity to help us bring this primary to a quick, victorious, and decisive end,” he said.
Haley has vowed to stay in the race “as long as we are competitive.”
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By JILL COLVIN and BILL BARROW (Associated Press)
GREENSBORO, N.C. — He’s argued his four criminal indictments and mug shot bolstered his support among Black voters who see him as a victim of discrimination just like them.
He’s compared himself to Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, who died in an Arctic prison imprisoned by Vladimir Putin, and suggested that he is a political dissident, too.
And in nearly every public appearance, he repeats falsehoods about the election he lost.
Candidates on the verge of winning their parties’ nominations generally massage their messaging and moderate positions that may energize hardcore primary voters but are less appealing to a broader audience. In political terms, they “pivot.”
Not Donald Trump. The former president is instead doubling down on often-incendiary rhetoric that offends wide swaths of voters, seeming to be doing little to rein in his most irascible and oftentimes self-defeating instincts. That’s even as some of his most loyal allies have suggested he shift his focus and tone down rhetoric that risks offending independent voters and people outside his base.
“Donald Trump is Donald Trump. That’s not going to change,” said senior campaign adviser Chris LaCivita. “Our job is not to remake Donald Trump.”
LaCivita and other top campaign officials instead say their role is to provide the organization “to amplify and to force project” Trump’s message.
The campaign, he said, had already assumed a general election posture before voting began, running ads attacking President Joe Biden before the Iowa caucuses. So while Trump is now talking less about his last remaining GOP rival, former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley, his campaign is focused on building out a general election infrastructure as it turns its focus from early voting states to November battlegrounds.
That includes efforts to take over the Republican National Committee, with plans to consolidate the party’s and campaign’s fundraising, political operations, communications and research operations. LaCivita is in line to become the RNC’s chief operating officer while retaining his role on the campaign.
“The campaign’s pivot,” LaCivita said, “is just a realization that we’ve already secured what we need to win. That manifests itself in not only the messaging but the mechanics.” He said to expect “more of the same” after Trump clinches the nomination, which is expected later this month.
Trump’s hardest edges, no matter how familiar to Americans nine years after he first ran for president, produce welcome fodder for Biden’s reelection team, which wants to motivate disaffected Democrats and independent voters by warning about a second Trump term.
Trump’s speeches at rallies can stretch for two hours as he meanders between policy proposals, personal stories and jokes, attacks on his opponents and complaints that he is being persecuted by the courts, and dire warnings about the country’s future. Trump often adds asides that were not in his prepared remarks. But some of his most divisive comments are part of his script.
He has bragged about nominating three Supreme Court justices who voted to end a national right to abortion, even as he urges Republicans not to be too extreme on an issue Democrats have credited for several victories. In promising to carry out the largest deportation operation in U.S. history, he has talked about immigrants “poisoning the blood of our country,” echoing Adolf Hitler. And he once described his enemies as “vermin,” language opponents deride as authoritarian.
At one rally this past weekend, Trump went so far as to cast Biden’s handling of the border as “a conspiracy to overthrow the United States of America.”
“Donald Trump is still Donald Trump — the same extreme, dangerous candidate voters rejected in 2020, and they’ll reject him again this November regardless of the team he has around him,” said Biden spokesman Kevin Munoz.
Trump’s advisers have at times encouraged him to speak less about grievance and retribution and more about his vision for a second term. But after three campaigns for the White House and four years in office, Trump is set in his ways. Former aides learned long ago that trying to pressure Trump to rein in his impulses often only led him to dig in deeper. And his campaign team seems to respect and trust the former president’s political instincts, pointing to his sweep of the GOP primaries so far.
Trump spokesman Steven Cheung said Trump would not change. Americans “deserve a president who will not sugarcoat what’s happening in the world,” he said.
Interviews with Republicans, including Trump supporters and those still backing Haley’s beleaguered bid, reflect concerns that Trump risks fumbling a clear opportunity against Biden, who faces low approval ratings and widespread voter questions about his age and readiness for a second term.
“At some point (Trump) needs to take the spotlight off himself,” said Tom Davis, a former Virginia congressman who backs Haley. Davis noted improving economic indicators but said Biden remains burdened by concerns about inflation and “has been bad on the border” and “terrible on the deficit.”
Even Trump voters seem to recognize the problem: According to AP VoteCast data, about half of Republicans in conservative South Carolina — including about a quarter of Trump’s own supporters — are concerned he is too extreme to win the general election. While Trump dominates among conservative voters, those voters represented just 37% of the electorate in the November 2020 presidential election.
Trump held rallies Saturday in North Carolina and Virginia, two states that hold primaries on Super Tuesday but are also potential swing states in November’s general election.
Both states highlight Trump’s potential problems in November: He dominates among conservatives, especially in rural and small-town America, but struggles with more moderate voters in more urban settings.
North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper, a Democrat who was re-elected in 2020 even as Trump won his state, said he welcomes the contrast between Trump and Biden.
“Do you want a president who wakes up every morning thinking about the American people?” he asked in an interview. “Or do you want a president who wakes up every morning thinking about himself?”
Biden won Virginia in 2020. A year later, Virginians elected Republican Glenn Youngkin as governor. Youngkin emphasized education and economic policy, and attracted urban and suburban moderates who rejected Trump. Some of the states’ suburban and exurban congressional districts have become more favorable to Democrats in the Trump era.
Notably, Youngkin has not endorsed Trump. He declined an interview request through aides.
Former Speaker Newt Gingrich, a Trump ally who sometimes speaks to the former president, compared 2024 to 1980, when Republican Ronald Reagan won a landslide over Democratic incumbent Jimmy Carter, who was saddled with inflation, high unemployment and international conflict. Reagan, dubbed “the happy warrior,” won 44 states and a new Republican Senate with “a positive vision,” Gingrich said, that was about more than Carter’s record.
“When you have the kind of numbers Biden has, what people need is about 70% positive, 30% anti-Biden,” Gingrich said, insisting Trump could usher in a Republican wave like when he beat Hillary Clinton in 2016.
Just as possible, however, is a repeat of 2018, when Republicans lost the House majority, or 2020, when Trump lost and Democrats reclaimed Senate control, or 2022, when Republicans lost winnable Senate races and failed to flip the chamber.
South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham suggests Trump and his campaign should “just keep doing what they’re doing.”
But Graham himself has pivoted. After he ran for president in 2016, Graham vowed that “if we nominate Trump, we will get destroyed.” Now, he is a Trump confidant.
“Everybody that wants to give him advice, he beat like a drum,” Graham said at Trump’s South Carolina victory party.
___
Colvin reported from New York.
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WASHINGTON — Nikki Haley has won the Republican primary in the District of Columbia, notching her first victory of the 2024 campaign.
Her victory Sunday at least temporarily halts Donald Trump’s sweep of the GOP voting contests, although the former president is likely to pick up several hundred more delegates in this week’s Super Tuesday races.
Despite her early losses, Haley has said she would remain in the race at least through those contests, although she has declined to name any primary she felt confident she would win. Following her loss in her home state of South Carolina, Haley remained adamant that voters in the places that followed deserved an alternative to Trump despite his dominance thus far in the campaign.
The Associated Press declared Haley the winner Sunday night after D.C. Republican Party officials released the results. She won all 19 delegates at stake.
“It’s not surprising that Republicans closest to Washington dysfunction are rejecting Donald Trump and all his chaos,” Haley spokesperson Olivia Perez-Cubas said in a statement, noting that Haley became the first woman to win a Republican primary in history.
Washington is one of the most heavily Democratic jurisdictions in the nation, with only about 23,000 registered Republicans in the city. Democrat Joe Biden won the district in the 2020 general election with 92% of the vote.
Trump’s campaign issued a statement shortly after Haley’s victory sarcastically congratulating her on being named “Queen of the Swamp by the lobbyists and DC insiders that want to protect the failed status quo.”
Haley held a rally in the nation’s capital on Friday before heading back to North Carolina and a series of states holding Super Tuesday primaries. She joked with more than 100 supporters inside a hotel ballroom, “Who says there’s no Republicans in D.C., come on.”
“We’re trying to make sure that we touch every hand that we can and speak to every person,” Haley said.
As she gave her standard campaign speech, criticizing Trump for running up federal deficit, one rallygoer bellowed, “He cannot win a general election. It’s madness.” That prompted agreement from Haley, who argues that she can deny Biden a second term but Trump can’t.
While campaigning as an avowed conservative, Haley has tended to perform better among more moderate and independent-leaning voters.
Four in 10 Haley supporters in South Carolina’s GOP primary were self-described moderates, compared with 15% for Trump, according to AP VoteCast, a survey of more than 2,400 voters taking part in the Republican primary in South Carolina, conducted for AP by NORC at the University of Chicago. On the other hand, 8 in 10 Trump supporters identified as conservatives, compared to about half of Haley’s backers.
Trump won an uncontested D.C. primary during his 2020 reelection bid but placed a distant third four years earlier behind Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida and former Ohio Gov. John Kasich. Rubio’s win was one of only three in his unsuccessful 2016 bid. Other more centrist Republicans, including Mitt Romney and John McCain, won the city’s primaries in 2012 and 2008 on their way to winning the GOP nomination.
___
Kinnard reported from Columbia, South Carolina.
Copyright © 2024 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
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By MEG KINNARD and WILL WEISSERT (Associated Press)
WASHINGTON — Nikki Haley has won the Republican primary in the District of Columbia, notching her first victory of the 2024 campaign.
Her victory Sunday at least temporarily halts Donald Trump’s sweep of the GOP voting contests, although the former president is likely to pick up several hundred more delegates in this week’s Super Tuesday races.
Despite her early losses, Haley has said she would remain in the race at least through those contests, although she has declined to name any primary she felt confident she would win. Following last week’s loss in her home state of South Carolina, Haley remained adamant that voters in the places that followed deserved an alternative to Trump despite his dominance thus far in the campaign.
The Associated Press declared Haley the winner Sunday night after D.C. Republican Party officials released the results. She won all 19 delegates at stake.
Washington is one of the most heavily Democratic jurisdictions in the nation, with only about 23,000 registered Republicans in the city. Democrat Joe Biden won the district in the 2020 general election with 92% of the vote.
Haley held a rally in the nation’s capital on Friday before heading back to North Carolina and a series of states holding Super Tuesday primaries. She joked with more than 100 supporters inside a hotel ballroom, “Who says there’s no Republicans in D.C., come on.”
“We’re trying to make sure that we touch every hand that we can and speak to every person,” Haley said.
As she gave her standard campaign speech, criticizing Trump for running up federal deficit, one rallygoer bellowed, “He cannot win a general election. It’s madness.” That prompted agreement from Haley, who argues that she can deny Biden a second term but Trump won’t be able to.
While campaigning as an avowed conservative, Haley has tended to perform better among more moderate and independent-leaning voters.
Four in 10 Haley supporters in South Carolina’s GOP primary were self-described moderates, compared with 15% for Trump, according to AP VoteCast, a survey of more than 2,400 voters taking part in the Republican primary in South Carolina, conducted for AP by NORC at the University of Chicago. On the other hand, 8 in 10 Trump supporters identified as conservatives, compared to about half of Haley’s backers.
Trump won an uncontested D.C. primary during his 2020 reelection bid but placed a distant third four years earlier behind Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida and former Ohio Gov. John Kasich. Rubio’s win was one of only three in his unsuccessful 2016 bid. Other more centrist Republicans, including Mitt Romney and John McCain, won the city’s primaries in 2012 and 2008 on their way to winning the GOP nomination.
___
Kinnard reported from Columbia, South Carolina.
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Nikki Haley visited Needham, Massachusetts on Saturday night with New Hampshire Governor Chris Sununu and they aren’t too impressed with how Massachusetts is handling the migrant housing crisis.
“Governors always find a way to get it done, yes governor’s know what they’re doing. Although, I say that in Massachusetts… I don’t know. I don’t know about this.” said Haley.
New Hampshire Governor Chris Sununu was poking fun at Massachusetts during Nikki Haley’s campaign event in Needham last night. He’s firing back at Governor Maura Healey after she called his decision to send the national guard down to the southern border a misstep.
In a one-on-one interview with NBC10 Boston, Nikki Haley tells us that as president, she would establish a national E-Verify program that would require businesses to prove their employees are here legally, defund sanctuary cities and put twenty-five thousand border patrol and ICE agents on the ground.
Haley also criticized Donald Trump for getting in the way of a bipartisan border deal that recently fell flat on Capitol Hill. Governor Healey is calling on Congress to take that bill up again and pass it.
“The amount of money Massachusetts is spending to take care of illegal immigrants is the same amount of money they could be doing to take care of their own homeless, to take care of mental health, to take care of the needs of the people of Massachusetts. At some point this all has to stop.” she said.
Haley is heading to Vermont and Maine on Sunday to make her final bid to New England voters.
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The rest of the city’s elections, including the Democratic presidential primary and this year’s local contests, will be held in June.
Visit WTOP’s Election 2024 page for our comprehensive election year coverage.
Republicans in D.C. get a head start in picking their nominee for president. The D.C. GOP is holding its Republican presidential primary Friday through Sunday at The Madison Hotel in Northwest. The rest of the city’s elections, including the Democratic presidential primary and this year’s local contests, will be held in June.
Polls close at 7 p.m. Sunday.
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Giang Nguyen
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RALEIGH, N.C. — The state is getting visits this weekend from major political players in the presidential race days before Super Tuesday.
Former President Donald Trump will be in Greensboro later today for a “Get Out the Vote” rally. He is speaking at the Greensboro Coliseum Complex at 2 p.m.
Republican candidate Nikki Haley will also be in Raleigh later today for a rally. She is speaking at Union Station at 12:30 p.m.
The former South Carolina governor is trailing behind Trump in the polls. But, she is vowing to stay in the race through Super Tuesday next week when North Carolina will host its primary election. .
Vice President Kamala Harris also made a trip to North Carolina.
On Friday, she was joined by North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper at 12:40 p.m. on Durham’s historic Black Wall Street.
Vice President Kamala Harris visited Durham on Friday to talk about the White House plan to invest millions in the economy.
This is her second trip to the state this year. In January, Harris visited a middle school in Charlotte and announced an additional $285 million in federal funding from the Safer Communities Act.
Saturday is the last day for early voting ahead of Tuesday’s election.
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LANSING, Mich. – Joe Biden and Donald Trump easily won their party’s primaries in Michigan, but Tuesday’s results showed that both candidates have cause for concern in their bid to win the swing state in November.
An “uncommitted” vote in Michigan’s Democratic primary was the first indication of how backlash over President Biden’s handling of the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza might impact his reelection campaign. Trump won his primary by a large margin, but support for rival Nikki Haley once again showed that some Republican voters may have misgivings about giving the former president another four years in the general election.
Here are some takeaways from Michigan:
Biden, Trump each move closer to party’s nomination
Michigan was the last major primary state before Super Tuesday, and both sides were watching closely for implications for the November general election in one of the few genuine swing states left in the country.
Biden has now cruised to victories over lesser known candidates in South Carolina, Nevada and New Hampshire, which he won in a write-in campaign. Tuesday’s results show that his standing is still strong in Michigan, which Biden returned to the Democratic column in 2020.
Trump has swept all five of the early state contests, including South Carolina, the home state of rival Haley. He now heads into Super Tuesday, when 15 states and one territory hold Republican nominating contests, as the overwhelming favorite to lock up the Republican nomination.
Michigan was one of three so-called blue wall states, including Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, that Trump won in 2016. He predicted a big win beforehand.
Just 16 of Michigan’s 55 Republican presidential delegates will be determined by the primary results, while the remaining delegates will be allocated during a March 2 convention. Trump’s anticipated dominance at the state convention, where grassroots activists will play a key role, will decide the allocation of the remaining 39 GOP delegates.
Some Democrats express anger over Gaza with ‘uncommitted’ vote
Michigan has become the focal point of Democratic frustration regarding the White House’s actions in the Israel-Hamas conflict. It has the largest concentration of Arab Americans in the nation.
That anger came through loud and clear on Tuesday as some voters marked “uncommitted” on their ballot in the Democratic primary. Biden still dominated the primary, but the result could be a concern in a state he won by less than 3% in 2020 and likely can’t afford to lose this year.
Organizers of the “uncommitted” movement had purposely kept expectations low, having only seriously begun their push a few weeks ago. The “Listen to Michigan” campaign that organized the push said they were hoping for 10,000 votes, pointing to Trump’s win of less than 11,000 votes in 2016 to show the significance of that number.
When Barack Obama ran for reelection in 2012, the last time a Democratic presidential incumbent sought re-election, the “uncommitted” option received close to 21,000 votes — or 11 percentage points.
The “uncommitted” vote totals would need to be between 20 and 30 percentage points for Democrats to worry about their impact in November, said Richard Czuba, a pollster who has long tracked Michigan politics.
“Twenty percent gets my attention. If it rises to 25%, that gets a lot more attention and if it rises above 30%, I think that’s a signal that Joe Biden has pretty substantial issues in his base,” said Czuba.
Much of the “uncommitted” vote was expected to come from the east side of the state, in communities such as Dearborn and Hamtramck, where Arab Americans represent close to half of the population. Biden won Dearborn by a roughly 3-to-1 advantage in 2020 and Hamtramck by a 5 to 1 margin.
Some Republicans still oppose Trump
Despite Trump’s clear victory in Michigan, Haley still saw significant support from the swing state’s Republicans.
Some of her best results came in Oakland and Kent counties, where Democrats have been gaining ground in recent years, contributing to their recent statewide success. She also performed better in counties where the state’s largest universities are located, Washtenaw and Ingham counties.
Trump has dominated in primaries with help from his base but his strength among general election voters remains unclear. The former president has appeared in Michigan regularly in the eight years since he became president, while Haley only began stumping in the state over the weekend.
AP VoteCast reveals that a large portion of Trump’s opposition within the Republican primaries has come from voters who abandoned him before this year.
All three statewide Republican candidates that Trump endorsed in the 2022 midterms were crushed by Democratic incumbents.
Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.
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BLOOMINGTON, Minn. — Minnesota voters will be among those deciding candidates for the November election on Super Tuesday and Republican Nikki Haley is hoping to win them over.
She brought her campaign to Bloomington Monday after a landslide loss to former President Donald Trump in South Carolina — Haley’s home state.
Criticized for failing to go after Trump, Haley came out swinging.
“At no point is he talking about the lawlessness in our cities, and at no point is he talking about what he is going to do about the wars around the world. All he is doing is talking about himself,” she said.
Haley says fiscal responsibility would be her top priority.
Haley appealed to Minnesota Republicans’ independent streak, something she also stressed in a one-on-one interview with WCCO.
“Look at what’s happened in Minnesota since Donald Trump because president. Things started to fall apart in Minnesota,” Haley said. “You no longer have the state House, you no longer have the state Senate. You look at the law and look at the high taxes, everything that’s happening is because suburban voters stopped voting.”
But Haley will have to do more than just do well in one state, 16 states and territories are holding presidential contests on Super Tuesday, with more than one-third of all delegates for the Republican nomination are up for grabs.
Minnesota Democrat Dean Phillips floated a potential unity ticket with Haley over the weekend. On Monday, Haley said she “appreciated the thought… But her focus is running in the Republican primary.”
The next presidential contest is Tuesday’s Michigan primary. Former president Trump has a 90-delegate lead in the race — 1,215 is needed to secure the candidacy.
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After a disappointing 20-point primary loss in her home state of South Carolina on Saturday, Nikki Haley pledged to soldier on, even as former President Donald Trump appears to have all but secured the GOP nomination.
Addressing a crowd of hundreds of supporters at her headquarters in Charleston, Haley briefly appeared to be gearing up to announce that she was dropping out of the race. “This has never been about me or my political future. We need to beat Joe Biden in November,” she said before adding, to her supporters’ relief: “I don’t believe Donald Trump can beat Joe Biden.”
After Haley lost to Trump in New Hampshire in late January, the former South Carolina governor said she felt she would need a better result in her home state in order “to give people in Super Tuesday states a reason to see and have us fight on.”
Haley’s Saturday result—just under 40 percent—fell below that mark (she won 43 percent of the vote in New Hampshire). In her speech, she appeared to fudge the numbers, saying she won “around” 40 percent, which was “about” the size of her tally in New Hampshire.
Earlier last week, Haley vowed to continue campaigning until “the last person votes,” and on Saturday, she declared, “Today is not the end of our story.”
“I’m not giving up this fight when a majority of Americans disapprove of both Trump and Biden,” she wrote on X, formerly Twitter. “In the next ten days, 21 states and territories will speak. They have the right to a real choice, not a Soviet-style election with only one candidate. And I have a duty to give them that choice.”
But her comments hint that she may not last past early March, when voters in 15 states and one territory will head to the polls on Super Tuesday. In a comment to reporters after she cast her own vote Saturday, Haley said Super Tuesday was “as far as I’ve thought in terms of going forward,” per Politico.
Haley is traveling to Michigan on Sunday, which hosts its primary on Tuesday, and then will hit at least six more states. Her campaign announced Friday that it would be launching a seven-figure ad buy ahead of the March 5 primaries.
Trump, for his part, is already acting as if the GOP nomination is already a foregone conclusion. In stark contrast to his New Hampshire victory speech, in which he relentlessly bashed Haley, the GOP frontrunner didn’t even utter his chief rival’s name on Saturday. “I have never seen the Republican Party so unified,” he said in a victory speech.
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(CNN) — Former President Donald Trump won South Carolina’s Republican presidential primary Saturday, further tightening his grip on the nomination and leaving his last remaining major rival, Nikki Haley, to consider her dwindling options.
The former president has swept all GOP nominating contests to date, first beating the field by large margins in Iowa and New Hampshire, before cleaning up in Nevada, where Haley didn’t appear on the ballot, and in the US Virgin Islands.
But his romp in South Carolina, which twice elected Haley its governor, might be the most impressive of this campaign.
“This was a little sooner than we anticipated, and even bigger win than we anticipated,” Trump told a crowd at his election night watch party in Columbia shortly after being projected the winner.
Flanked onstage by a who’s who of Palmetto State political leaders, including Gov. Henry McMaster and Sen. Tim Scott, Trump declared, “I have never seen the Republican Party so unified as it is right now.”
While Scott’s fellow South Carolina senator, Lindsey Graham, was booed at Trump’s event, Scott was welcomed to the podium by wild cheers. He has emerged, since dropping out of the primary and endorsing Trump, as one of the former president’s favorite surrogates and a potential running mate.
“South Carolina is Trump country,” Scott declared to the delighted crowd.
Saturday’s result now places the onus on Haley, who continued in her concession speech to insist she has no plans to drop out of the race – a move that she said would leave GOP voters in the upcoming primary states with “a Soviet-style election with only one candidate.”
“There are huge numbers of voters in our Republican primaries who are saying they want an alternative. I said earlier this week that no matter what happens in South Carolina, I would continue to run for president,” Haley told supporters in Charleston. “I’m a woman of my word.”
Saturday’s result now places the onus on Haley, who doubled down earlier this week in a speech, declaring, “I’m not going anywhere.”
The next stop on the GOP nominating calendar is Michigan, where Republicans will vote in a primary Tuesday. After a few more scattered contests, March 5 will bring Super Tuesday – and an opportunity for Trump to draw even closer to wrapping up his third consecutive party nomination.
Defeated on her home turf, Haley’s already struggling campaign is likely to come under renewed pressure from Republicans who want her to drop out and allow Trump to focus exclusively on his likely rematch with President Joe Biden, who won the Palmetto State’s Democratic primary earlier this month with more than 96% of the vote.
Still, Haley’s team has consistently said the show will go on. They plan to pour resources into Super Tuesday states, according to campaign manager Betsy Ankney, who told reporters before polls closed that Haley would carry on no matter the outcome.
“We know that Trump is a juggernaut. We know that he is strong. We know that he has been the de facto leader of the party for the past eight years. So, breaking that hold is going to take a lot,” Ankney said. “We are sprinting through the tape here. We have over 12 events planned in those Super Tuesday states, and we’re going to keep fighting.”
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Gregory Krieg and CNN
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