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It was the kind of exchange that Ms. Haley has used to steadily build momentum — and it seems to be paying off. In diners, gyms and event halls across New Hampshire and South Carolina, the state she led for six years, voters have recently shown increased interest in Ms. Haley’s campaign, with a palpable shift in energy. In South Carolina, where her homecoming had the feel of a rally, Ms. Haley’s message appeared to resonate. Her campaign officials said they had to move the event to a larger location last week after so many people signed up to attend. Ms. Haley remains far behind the former president she served under, who continues to dominate in national polls, as well as in surveys in every early-voting state.
Persons: Haley, Haley’s, Donald J, Trump, “ Haley, Locations: New Hampshire, South Carolina, Derry, Bluffton, S.C
Her rivals, including Mr. Trump and Gov. “Nikki has always been a tough, anti-establishment conservative,” said Olivia Perez-Cubas, a spokeswoman for Ms. Haley. Ms. Haley’s attempt to thread the needle on abortion is already being tested, as she has faced skepticism from Iowa’s evangelical community, a critical voting bloc. Addressing a conservative Christian audience in Iowa, Ms. Haley said she would have signed a ban on abortion after six weeks of pregnancy as governor. Democrats seized on Ms. Haley’s remarks as proof that, despite her tone, she is no moderate on the issue.
Persons: Ryan Williams, Mitt Romney, Haley, , , Trump, Trump’s, Ron DeSantis, panders, Jaime Harrison, surrogates, “ Nikki, Olivia Perez, Ms, Haley’s, Bob Vander Plaats, DeSantis, Marlys Popma, Organizations: Republican, Gov, Democratic National Committee, Republican Party Locations: Florida, Iowa
For most of the 2024 presidential cycle, Nikki Haley has ceded ground in Iowa to Donald J. Trump, who dominates its polls, and to Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, who has made the state central to his hopes of besting the Republican front-runner. But Ms. Haley, who has focused more energy on the primaries in New Hampshire and her home state of South Carolina where she served as governor, is sending strong signals that she still intends to make it a fight. With just two months to go before the critical first-in-the-nation caucuses, Ms. Haley, the former ambassador to the United Nations, is starting a series of campaign events Thursday as her battle with Mr. DeSantis to become Mr. Trump’s nearest rival reaches a fever pitch. “She is peaking at the right time,” said Chris Cournoyer, a state senator and Ms. Haley’s Iowa state chairwoman.
Persons: Nikki Haley, Donald J, Trump, Ron DeSantis, Haley, DeSantis, Trump’s, , Chris Cournoyer, Organizations: Gov, Republican, United Locations: Iowa, Florida, New Hampshire, South Carolina, United Nations, Haley’s Iowa
Nikki Haley’s presidential campaign plans to reserve $10 million in television, radio and digital advertising in Iowa and New Hampshire starting in the first week of December — its first investment in advertising this cycle and a move meant to give the candidate a boost as the clock ticks for the field to make significant gains against former President Donald J. Trump. Ms. Haley, the former governor of South Carolina and a U.S. ambassador to the United Nations under Mr. Trump, has seen steadily rising numbers in surveys of early voting states. A series of standout debate performances has brought in grass roots donors and more high-dollar backers after months of campaigning, with campaign officials saying it raised more than $1 million in the 24 hours after the debate last week. She is now polling second in New Hampshire and third in Iowa, according to some surveys, but Mr. Trump remains the dominant front-runner in those states and nationally.
Persons: Nikki Haley’s, Donald J, Trump, Ms, Haley Organizations: New Hampshire, United Nations, Mr Locations: Iowa, New, South Carolina, U.S, New Hampshire
On the national debate stage, in interviews and at town halls, the message on immigration from every top Republican in the 2024 presidential race has resounded clearly: It is time to shut down the nation’s southern border. Coming into view now is how candidates would approach the issue of undocumented immigrants who are already in the United States — of both those who have been living and working in the country for years, and those who have entered more recently. In a packed diner in Londonderry, N.H., on Thursday, Nikki Haley, the former governor of South Carolina who has called on the United States to “close” the border and defund “sanctuary cities,” was pressed on just that issue by a potential voter. The question of how to provide an avenue to citizenship or permanent legal residency for immigrants, whether undocumented or under temporary forms of protection like DACA, has long been at the center of the debate around overhauling the nation’s immigration laws. Her response to Neil Philcrantz, 71, a Republican and retired quality engineer from the nearby town of Hudson, was revealing in its encapsulation of Republicans’ embrace of hard-line tactics and her own rhetorical shifts on the issue.
Persons: Nikki Haley, Neil Philcrantz, Organizations: Republican Locations: United States, Londonderry, N.H, South Carolina, Hudson
Last week, Mr. DeSantis doubled down on his opposition to helping some of the nearly one million people contending with shortages of food, clean water and shelter in the region. The Never Back Down ad from this week spliced the clips from Ms. Haley with comments from Mr. DeSantis criticizing her in an NBC interview. Spokespeople for both Mr. DeSantis’s campaign and Never Back Down maintain that their critiques of Ms. Haley are accurate. But Ms. Haley took an aggressive stance against resettling Syrians in her state after the terror attacks in Paris that same year, citing gaps in intelligence that could make the vetting process difficult. Rick McConnell, a 70-year-old Air Force veteran who heard Mr. DeSantis speak, said he understood that Gazans needed food, water and medical supplies.
Persons: Haley, birdseed, DeSantis, Haley —, Trump, , Ms, Haley’s, “ She’s, , ” Ms, DeSantis’s, Rick McConnell, McConnell, Mr, , Corrine Rothchild, Jerusalem, Tommy Tuberville, Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel Organizations: DeSantis’s, , Fox News, NBC, resettling Syrians, Air Force, Foreign, Trump’s United Nations Locations: Florida, Gaza, America, United States, South Carolina, Paris, East, Iran, Israel, China, Alabama, Ukraine, U.S
“When she was here last week, we didn’t have to call people, people were calling us,” he said. And with voters and donors starting to pay more attention, her rivals are likely to as well. Since the last debate, Ms. Haley has mostly split her time between New Hampshire and South Carolina while also making up ground in Iowa. She has continued to burnish her foreign policy credentials, criticize Republicans on spending — which played well in the first debate — and call for a change in generational leadership. But she also pledged to defund sanctuary cities and send the military into Mexico to tackle drug cartels.
Persons: , Haley, Trump’s Organizations: Anselm College Locations: New Hampshire, South Carolina, Iowa, Grand Mound , Iowa, defund, Mexico, St, Goffstown
As in prior races, she’s on a tight budget, spending conservatively, and keeping up a grueling schedule of appearances. But the 2024 contest, in which Ms. Haley still trails former President Donald J. Trump as well as Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida in national surveys, presents different challenges in a vastly altered political landscape. Though she is still pitching herself as an outsider who can take on the establishment, Ms. Haley now has a lengthy political résumé that includes a stint in the Trump administration. And much of the grass-roots support that helped power her victories in South Carolina has rallied behind her former boss, Mr. Trump.
Persons: Haley —, , Haley, Donald J, Trump, Ron DeSantis, , Kevin Madden, Mitt Romney’s Organizations: United Nations, Republican Locations: Milwaukee, Florida, South Carolina
Breaking from her usual stump speech at a South Carolina town hall event on Monday, Nikki Haley paused to condemn a deadly weekend rampage in Jacksonville, Fla., that the authorities were investigating as a hate crime. “I am not going to lie to you, it takes me back to a dark place,” Ms. Haley told an audience of roughly 1,000 people gathered in a corporate campus auditorium in Indian Land. “There is no place for hate in America.”Ms. Haley was governor in 2015 when a white supremacist opened fire in an African American church in Charleston, S.C., and killed nine Black parishioners at a Bible study. Ms. Haley eventually called for the removal of the Confederate battle flag from the grounds of the South Carolina Capitol. Ms. Haley also toed the Republican Party line on guns and racism, suggesting that such violence and mass shootings could be prevented if Americans improved mental health services, abided by gun laws and rejected division and hate in their everyday lives.
Persons: Nikki Haley, , ” Ms, Haley, Ms Organizations: Confederate, South Carolina Capitol, Republican Party Locations: South Carolina, Jacksonville, Fla, America, Charleston, S.C
Less than 30 minutes into the first Republican presidential debate, the men onstage were bickering — just as Nikki Haley predicted. “I think this is exactly why Margaret Thatcher said, ‘If you want something said, ask a man,’” quipped Ms. Haley, the former governor of South Carolina and former ambassador to the United Nations. “If you want something done, ask a woman.”The response was the beginning of a standout performance for Ms. Haley, who already cut a distinct figure: the lone woman in the Republican field, standing in a white and light blue suit-style dress among a stretch of men in nearly identical red ties. Her Thatcher line — a favorite on the stump and the inspiration for the title of one of her books — captured the balance she has sought to strike between testing her party’s attitudes and not leaning too far into her gender. But Ms. Haley, who has struggled to gain traction in primary polls dominated by Donald J. Trump, did not always stay above the fray.
Persons: Nikki Haley, , Margaret Thatcher, ’ ”, Haley, Thatcher, , Donald J, Trump Organizations: United Nations, Republican Locations: South Carolina
For President Biden and his party, the appointment of a special counsel on Friday in the investigation into Hunter Biden was hardly a welcome development. A blossoming criminal inquiry focused on the president’s son is a high-risk proposition that comes with the dangers of an election-year trial and investigations that could balloon beyond the tax and gun charges the younger Mr. Biden already faces. Yet many Democrats were sanguine about a dark moment in a summer of cautiously bright news for their president. Part of their sense of calm stems from a version of the what-aboutism often adopted by Republicans since Donald J. Trump’s rise: Mr. Biden’s son is under investigation, Democrats say, but across the aisle, the G.O.P. front-runner has actually been criminally indicted — three times.
Persons: Biden, Hunter Biden, pollsters, Hunter, Donald J, Biden’s, , , Donald Trump, , Jamie Raskin Organizations: Democratic, Maryland, Republicans
The Republican Party of Iowa booth took shape on Wednesday, the day before the opening of the Iowa State Fair, which nearly every Republican presidential candidate is set to attend. Credit... Maddie McGarvey for The New York Times
Persons: Maddie McGarvey Organizations: Republican Party of Iowa, Iowa, Fair, Republican, The New York
Nikki Haley is campaigning at a grueling pace as she fights to stay competitive in the Republican presidential contest, crisscrossing Iowa and New Hampshire to find a clear lane forward in a race dominated by Donald J. Trump and his mountain of legal problems. By many measures, Ms. Haley is running a healthy campaign poised to capitalize on rivals’ mistakes. She has built a robust fund-raising operation and her team has cash to spare: A super PAC backing her this week announced a $13 million advertising effort in Iowa and New Hampshire. And at events, voters often like what she has to say. “She is not pounding the pulpit,” Eric Ray, 42, a Republican legal defense consultant in Iowa, said after watching her speak at a barbecue restaurant last weekend in Iowa City, adding that she had his vote.
Persons: Nikki Haley, Donald J, Trump, Haley, ” Eric Ray, Kamala Harris — Organizations: Republican, PAC Locations: Iowa, New Hampshire, Iowa City
“We will make sure that every member of Congress has to get their health care through the V.A. The issues are personal for Ms. Haley, whose husband, Michael, is a major in the South Carolina Army National Guard and served in Afghanistan in 2013. This summer, Ms. Haley joined other military spouses in seeing their partners off, as they deployed to Africa with the Army National Guard. “Don’t you think it’s time we have term limits in Congress? “Johns Hopkins recently came out and defined what a woman was,” she said in Hollis, referring to the research university.
Persons: we’ll, Haley, Trump, , Michael, ” Ms, , Biden, Mr, Kamala Harris, Ms, Johns Hopkins, Organizations: Patrol, Republican, Internal Revenue Service, Trump, South Carolina Army National Guard, Army National Guard, Fox News, Locations: Mexico, Afghanistan, Africa, Congress, Hollis
But Mr. Trump’s legal troubles could still provide an opening for one of his rivals. officer, dared to mention the charges, and he also contradicted Mr. Trump’s false assertion that he had won the 2020 election. “One of the things we need in our elected leaders is for them to tell the truth, even if it’s unpopular,” Mr. Hurd said. Donald Trump is not running for president to represent the people that voted for him in 2016 or 2020. Donald Trump us running to stay out of prison.”The vast majority of the crowd did not agree.
Persons: Asa Hutchinson of, , Hutchinson, Trump, cowed, Hurd, ” Mr, “ Donald Trump, Donald Trump Organizations: Locations: Asa Hutchinson of Arkansas, Iowa
At a pit stop outside Manchester, Mr. Hurd said he had no issue with championing another Republican. But he said he would not support Mr. Trump. “I’m not going to lie to get a microphone,” Mr. Hurd said, digging into a Philly cheesesteak and salty fries. Back on the road, Mr. Hurd did not downplay the challenges. Proving that group of people indeed exists as a coherent base of support will be the ultimate test of his candidacy.
Persons: Hurd, Trump, “ I’m, Mr, Organizations: Republican National, Philly, Republicans, Republican Party Locations: Manchester
Mr. DeSantis never once mentioned the progressive Democrats who have said they will boycott a speech by Mr. Herzog to a joint session of Congress on Wednesday. But he used his speech to emphasize his strong support for Israel and attack White House policies, as many conservatives have sought to portray Democrats who criticize Israel as anti-Zionist or even antisemitic. Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a long-shot Democratic presidential candidate, has been invited by House Republicans to testify on Capitol Hill on censorship. And top House Democrats have been rushing to reject comments from Representative Rashida Tlaib, who described Israel as “a racist state” at a progressive conference over the weekend. And he denounced efforts that he argued used “the economy and business to impose a radical left-wing agenda” on Israeli policy.
Persons: DeSantis, Herzog, Israel, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Rashida Tlaib, Tlaib, , Organizations: Democratic, House Republicans, Democrats, Congressional Progressive Caucus, West Bank, Israel Locations: Israel, Palestinian
One of the nation’s oldest and most venerated Latino civil rights organizations is at a critical juncture that some members say could determine its direction — or have dire implications for its future. Some have accused its president of fueling the very discrimination the organization first set out to eliminate. Half a dozen current and former members contend that Domingo Garcia, a Dallas lawyer who has led the group since 2018, is seeking to marginalize Puerto Rican members after he almost lost his seat last year to a candidate of Puerto Rican origin. They said the organization had suspended Puerto Rican members and fired, without cause, some of its most prominent leaders of Puerto Rican descent. Two amendments to the group’s constitution are up for consideration, one of which threatens to purge all island residents from its ranks.
Persons: Domingo Garcia Organizations: League of United Latin American, Puerto Rican Locations: Puerto Rico, Dallas, Puerto Rican
Hill Harper, an author and actor, on Monday entered Michigan’s 2024 Senate race, pledging to run to the left of Representative Elissa Slotkin, a moderate Democrat, in what is expected to be one of the most closely watched Democratic primary races in a 2024 presidential battleground state. Mr. Harper, a first-time candidate known for his roles on “CSI: NY” and “The Good Doctor,” began his campaign with a message focused on expanding Social Security and access to affordable health care, as well as tackling income inequality and student debt. In an interview, he said he planned to position himself as “the most progressive candidate” in the race and would work to bring jaded and unheard voters back into the Democratic fold. Donald J. Trump won this industrial Midwestern state by nearly 11,000 votes in 2016, and lost it to Joseph R. Biden Jr. by more than 150,000 votes in his 2020 re-election bid. Mr. Trump focused on the voting in Michigan in his efforts to subvert the 2020 election.
Persons: Hill Harper, Elissa Slotkin, Harper, , Donald J, Trump, Joseph R, Biden Organizations: Monday, Senate, Democratic, CSI, NY, Social Security, Washington , D.C, Michigan Statehouse Locations: Michigan, Washington ,, Washington
At a high school cafeteria in Merrimack, N.H., on Tuesday, where patriotic music blasted from the speakers and the lunch tables were decked in star-spangled napery, Gov. Doug Burgum of North Dakota mingled with families who were digging into eggs, sausage and pancakes at a Fourth of July breakfast hosted by the local Rotary Club. Nelson Disco, 88, one of the prospective voters in the small crowd, had a couple of questions for him. “You’ve got some competition,” Mr. Disco exclaimed, as the North Dakota governor told him he was seeking the Republican nomination for president. But Mr. Burgum was undeterred: “Feeling great” about the race, he said.
Persons: napery, Doug Burgum, Disco, “ You’ve, , Burgum Organizations: Rotary Club, North, Republican, New Locations: Merrimack, N.H, North Dakota, Iowa
Mr. Warnock consolidated Democratic voters, while Mr. Walker struggled to rally his party behind him. Mr. Walker was wrapping up a campaign that appears to have failed to consolidate the disparate wings of his party. Image Mr. Warnock spoke on Monday in Atlanta at the SWAG Shop barbershop with Killer Mike, the rapper. Credit... Nicole Craine for The New York TimesMr. Kemp kept some distance from Mr. Walker during the general election. Mr. Mathews said he planned to cast his ballot Tuesday for Mr. Walker.
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