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President Donald Trump shakes hands with Senator Mitch McConnell (R-KY) at a Keep America Great Rally at the Rupp Arena in Lexington, Kentucky, November 4, 2019. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell endorsed Donald Trump for president, putting aside years of hostilities between the two Republicans. "It is abundantly clear that former President Trump has earned the requisite support of Republican voters to be our nominee for President of the United States," McConnell, R-Ky., said in a statement Wednesday. McConnell's announcement was issued minutes after former United Nations ambassador Nikki Haley, Trump's last major GOP primary competitor, suspended her campaign. Haley did not endorse Trump in a statement putting her campaign on ice.
Persons: Donald Trump, Mitch McConnell, Trump, McConnell, Biden, Nikki Haley, Trump's, Haley Organizations: Rupp, Republican, United, GOP Locations: Lexington , Kentucky, United States, Ky, United Nations
He did include a brief plea for Haley voters to back him, but he also insulted some of them. But the reality is simple: The former president will need Haley's voters come November. The Washington Post cited Quinnipiac University, which found that while a large portion of Republican and Republican-leaning Haley voters would back Trump, 37% would vote for Biden. Regardless, the GOP primary showed how Trump continues to struggle in suburban areas that often have more educated voters. Haley might have had key policy differences with Trump on foreign policy, such as supporting Ukraine and reassuring North Atlantic Treaty Organization allies.
Persons: Donald Trump, MAGA, Nikki Haley, Trump, Haley, Biden, Nikki Haley's, Grover Cleveland, It's, Trump's, she's, it's, Margaret Thatcher Organizations: Service, Republican, ABC News, Trump, GOP, Washington Post, Quinnipiac University, Republicans, CBS, Treaty Organization, Trump Cabinet Locations: Vermont, Republican, Ukraine
Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell announced Wednesday he will support Donald Trump for the presidency, a move that comes more than three years after they have last spoken and after the Kentucky Republican pointedly blamed Trump for the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol. “It is abundantly clear that former President Trump has earned the requisite support of Republican voters to be our nominee for President of the United States,” McConnell said in a statement. The public support from McConnell, who announced last week he would step down as GOP leader at the end of the year, also came after his other top Republican senators have endorsed Trump. 2 Republican in the chamber who is running to replace McConnell, endorsed Trump earlier this month. Texas Sen. John Cornyn, another possible McConnell successor, backed Trump after he won the New Hampshire primary.
Persons: Mitch McConnell, Donald Trump, Trump, ” McConnell, , , Nikki Haley –, McConnell, John Thune, Texas Sen, John Cornyn Organizations: Kentucky Republican, Capitol, Republican, South Carolina Gov, Trump, New Locations: United States, Texas, New Hampshire
CNN —Donald Trump has put America on notice – his second term would be even more disruptive and turbulent than his first. He’s portraying America as a dystopian, failed state overwhelmed by lawlessness, urban blight and slipping toward World War III abroad. For Trump, America is not Ronald Reagan’s “shining city on a Hill.” It is a banana republic. Who are these people that would ruin our country?” Trump asked. After Trump demoralized US allies in his first term, Biden has reinvigorated and expanded NATO in responding to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine – an illegal land grab Trump suggests he will reward.
Persons: Donald Trump, Joe Biden, Nikki Haley, , Trump, he’s, conflating, “ We’re, we’re, ” Trump, Ronald Reagan’s “, , , quagmire –, Biden, chillingly, reedy, ” Biden, Grover Cleveland, He’s, Haley, Robert F, Kennedy Jr Organizations: CNN, Republican, GOP, Carnage, Trump, Justice Department, Capitol, Wednesday, White House, Democrat Locations: America, Ukraine, Florida, , Manchester , New Hampshire, Super, United States, NATO, Michigan, Arab, Gaza
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailNikki Haley has 'no path' to the Republican nomination, former U.S. ambassador saysLew Lukens, senior partner at Signum Global Advisors and former U.S. ambassador, says "this is Trump's nomination at this point."
Persons: Nikki Haley, Lew Lukens Organizations: Republican, Signum Global Advisors Locations: U.S
Democratic presidential candidate U.S. Representative Dean Phillips speaks to the media as he arrives at Londonderry High School during U.S. presidential primary election, in Londonderry, New Hampshire, U.S., January 23, 2024. Democratic Rep. Dean Phillips, Minn., has dropped out of the 2024 presidential race and endorsed President Joe Biden. "And it is clear that Joe Biden is OUR candidate and OUR opportunity to demonstrate what type of country America is and intends to be." Biden's campaign has been in general election mode for weeks, kicking into high gear after the president swept New Hampshire and South Carolina. Though Biden's age was not enough to singlehandedly keep Phillips' campaign afloat, it is still a top vulnerability as the general election nears.
Persons: Dean Phillips, Joe Biden, Phillips, Nikki Haley, Donald Trump, Biden, Jason Palmer, I'm, pare, Elon Musk, Bill Ackman, Democratic Sen, Joe Manchin, Robert Hur, Hur Organizations: Democratic, U.S, Londonderry High School, Tuesday, New, Democratic National Convention, Biden, Tesla, Republican, Department, Justice Locations: Londonderry , New Hampshire, U.S, Minn, America, American Samoa, New Hampshire, South Carolina, lockstep
The New York Times Audio app is home to journalism and storytelling, and provides news, depth and serendipity. If you haven’t already, download it here — available to Times news subscribers on iOS — and sign up for our weekly newsletter. The Headlines brings you the biggest stories of the day from the Times journalists who are covering them, all in about five minutes.
Organizations: New York Times, Times
Exit polls are a valuable tool to help understand primary voters’ demographic profile and political views. The share of Republican primary voters and caucusgoers holding these views about Trump’s fitness for office and the 2020 election varies from state to state, even as the dominant sentiment remains largely the same. Exit poll data this year finds GOP primary voters divided in their desired approach to abortion policy in a post-Roe v. Wade era. Trump has also racked up support among those primary voters who are the most acutely unhappy with the way things are going in the US. Exit polls for the Iowa Republican caucuses and the New Hampshire, South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia and California Republican presidential primaries were conducted by Edison Research on behalf of the National Election Pool.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, they’d, Joe Biden’s, Nikki Haley, Biden’s, Haley, Trump, , California –, MAGA, Wade, Biden Organizations: CNN —, GOP, Trump, South Carolina Gov, Republican, New Hampshire Republican, Election, Iowa GOP, Voters, Iowa Republican, California Republican, Edison Research, New, South Carolina Republican, North Carolina Republican, Virginia Republican Locations: – Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, California, Super, Iowa, New, California , Virginia
Read previewAfter a series of second-place finishes on Super Tuesday, Republican former UN Ambassador Nikki Haley seems poised to end her presidential campaign. Her dropping out of the race would leave former President Donald Trump the only remaining major candidate in the running to obtain the GOP nomination. Hayley had a relatively poor showing on Super Tuesday itself, losing to Trump in 14 of the 15 voting states. Earlier in the race, Haley's best bet to win the nomination was outlasting Trump in the hope he'd drop out of the race amid his slew of ongoing legal issues. A more likely pick, as Trump himself previously suggested, would be Sen. Tim Scott, Vivek Ramaswamy, or South Dakota Gov.
Persons: , Nikki Haley, Donald Trump, Hayley, Haley, Trump, we're, outlasting Trump, she's, Sen, Tim Scott, Vivek Ramaswamy, Kristi Noem Organizations: Service, Republican, Street Journal, CNN, NBC, Business, Trump, Super, Republican National Committee, South Dakota Gov Locations: Vermont, South Carolina, New, New Hampshire
Opinion: Bad omens for Trump
  + stars: | 2024-03-06 | by ( Opinion David Mark | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +9 min
CNN —Former President Donald Trump is the closest thing in modern political history to an incumbent who doesn’t hold the office. But these considerable advantages also raise questions about his general election chances given his inability to completely win over Republican primary voters. Despite effectively clinching the Republican nomination with a near-sweep of Super Tuesday states, Trump couldn’t escape the shadow cast by former South Carolina Gov. Haley dropped out Wednesday after consistently winning 30% or so of the GOP primary vote in the states she competed in. Undoubtedly some of the Republican voters who backed Haley in the primaries and caucuses will return to the Trump fold in November, maybe even a majority.
Persons: David Mark, , Donald Trump, doesn’t, Trump, Nikki Haley, Haley, Joe Biden, haven’t, Pat Buchanan, George H.W, Bush, Pat Sullivan, Buchanan, Bill Clinton, Ross Perot, Massachusetts Sen, Ted Kennedy, Jimmy Carter, Kennedy, Carter, Ronald Reagan, Joan, Wally McNamee, Corbis, Reagan, Gerald Ford, Richard Nixon, Ford, Owen Franken, Lyndon Johnson, Johnson, Sen, Eugene McCarthy, Hubert Humphrey, Nixon, Biden, Hillary Clinton, they’re, McCarthy, Dean Phillips, Marianne Williamson, , Israel –, Philips, doesn’t bode Organizations: Washington, CNN, Trump, Republican, South Carolina Gov, GOP, United Nations, Evangelical Pastors, GOP White House, Republican Party, Democratic, Electoral, New Hampshire Democratic, Biden, Rep, Dean Phillips of Minnesota, Twitter, Facebook, Hamas, Israel Locations: Arizona , Georgia, Michigan, Nevada , New Hampshire , Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Trump, Bedford , New Hampshire, Massachusetts, California, Boston, . Indiana, Minnesota, Vietnam, North Carolina, Virginia, Gaza
“We’re going to win this election because we have no choice,” Trump said at his Mar-a-Lago resort as he savored his sweetest election night since he beat Hillary Clinton in 2016. The time for that excuse is going to fast run out now that the shape of the 2024 general election is clear. “Until now, people didn’t think it was going to be Biden versus Trump, but here we are and we’re ready to go,” he said. One reason why Trump didn’t come across as a loser to his supporters was that he convinced grassroots GOP voters that he didn’t actually lose the 2020 election. Democratic control of the Senate and the tiny House GOP majority that fell short of red wave expectations were widely blamed on his botched strategizing.
Persons: Donald Trump, Joe Biden –, Trump, , he’s, We’re, ” Trump, Hillary Clinton, “ We’re, we’re, Biden, cranking, , ” Biden, He’ll, Nikki Haley, Trump’s, , Haley, Mitch Landrieu, Richard Nixon, Bill Clinton, Bernie Sanders, Grover Cleveland, Benjamin Harrison, Cleveland, didn’t, denialism –, P01135809, Mike Pence, Ron DeSantis Organizations: CNN, White, Capitol, Republican, California Republican, Biden, Trump The, GOP, South Carolina Gov, Republican Party, Democrats, White House, Trump, Democratic, Florida Gov Locations: Washington, Virginia, North Carolina , Oklahoma , Tennessee , Maine , Texas , Arkansas , Alabama, Colorado , Minnesota , Massachusetts, California, Lago, , tatters, New Hampshire, South Carolina, North Carolina, Iowa, Atlanta, Trump’s
The exit by Nikki Haley from the Republican primary after a string of resounding losses on Super Tuesday assured former President Donald J. Trump of his party’s nomination, kicking off a general election contest with President Biden that both sides expect will be bitter, brutal and long. The matchup that many Americans had long hoped to avoid — the 2024 sequel of Biden vs. Trump — is now an inescapable reality. It will be the country’s first presidential rematch in nearly 70 years, a consequential yet familiar collision of starkly different visions of American power, policy and democratic governance. And it will be an eight-month slog, with two nominees who polls show are deeply unpopular and who are each determined to make the race about his opponent, leaving both bent on running exceedingly negative campaigns. “I’m not the gift of all presidents,” Mr. Biden told donors at a fund-raiser last month, “but I’m sure in hell better than the last guy.”
Persons: Nikki Haley, Donald J, Trump, Biden, “ I’m, ” Mr Organizations: Republican, Super, Biden, Trump
A growing number of Republican National Committee members believe its campaign arm should help pay mounting legal bills for former President Donald Trump, a move that could strain the party's ability to financially support other candidates in the 2024 election. "I support the RNC paying President Trump's legal bills," Yue said. And the RNC historically has raised money to support candidates up and down the ballot, not to pay for a candidate's legal bills. There also might be a decision made at that meeting on whether the RNC will pay for Trump's legal bills. "The only mission of the Republican National Committee is to elect our presumptive nominee Trump as the 47th President," Yue wrote.
Persons: Donald Trump, Solomon Yue, Yue, Henry Barbour, Barbour, Nikki Haley, Trump, Trump's, Chris LaCivita —, , Ronna McDaniel, Joe Biden, Stormy Daniels, Biden's Organizations: Manhattan Criminal, Republican National Committee, RNC, CNBC, Reuters, Former United Nations, Republican, NBC, Trump, White Locations: New York City, Oregon, Houston, New York
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images Haley and her family walk back into the South Carolina State House after her inauguration in 2011. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images Haley waves to the crowd during the Conservative Political Action Conference in 2013. Alex Wong/Getty Images Haley hugs her husband after his Army National Guard unit returned in 2013. Haiyun Jiang/Bloomberg/Getty Images Haley takes the stage at her election night watch party in Charleston, South Carolina, in February 2024. Haley “won’t just go away,” said Katon Dawson, a longtime Haley ally and former chair of the South Carolina Republican Party.
Persons: Nikki Haley, Donald Trump, Haley, Trump, eked, , ” Haley, Travis Dove, Michael, Nalin, Rena, Twitter Haley, Gerry Melendez, AP Haley, Chip Somodevilla, Tim Dominick, Getty Images Haley, Mitt Romney, Justin Sullivan, Alex Wong, Michael Haley, Rainier Ehrhardt, Jaswinder Singh, Narinder Nanu, Bobby Jindal, Jindal, Win McNamee, Sean Rayford, Saul Loeb, Mike Pence, Drew Angerer, State Rex Tillerson, Matthew Rycroft, Boris Johnson, Bryan R, Smith, Raad Adayleh, Brendan Smialowski, Spencer Platt, Evan Vucci, Kevin Lamarque, Don Bolduc, Brian Snyder, Jonathan Ernst, Jake Tapper, Will Lanzoni, Demetrius Freeman, Rachel Mummey, Jonathan Newton, Haiyun Jiang, Nicole Craine, Anna Moneymaker, Kimberly Rice, , Haley’s, Ron DeSantis, Charles Koch, ‘ Won’t, “ I’m, Koch, Haley “ won’t, Katon Dawson, Ebony Davis, David Wright, Jennifer Agiesta Organizations: CNN, New, GOP, Trump, Republican Party, State House, New York Times, Twitter, South, AP, Capitol, South Carolina State House, Getty Images, Conservative Political, Conference, Army National Guard, Getty, Louisiana Gov, National Governors Association, Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, United Nations, United Nations Security Council, UN, State, British, Norwegian Refugee Council, Gali Tibbon, UN Security, West Bank, The United States, Anadolu Agency, Republican National Convention, Republican, Washington Post, Bloomberg, Former South Carolina Gov, Granite State, Super, Florida Gov, Prosperity, New Hampshire, South Carolina, SFA Fund, South Carolina Republican Party Locations: New Hampshire, South Carolina, California, Texas, Vermont, Virginia, North Carolina, Columbia , South Carolina, Afghanistan, Amritsar, India, AFP, Charleston , South Carolina, Columbia, State, New York, Syrian, United States, Jerusalem, Gali, Kuwait, Gaza, Londonderry , New Hampshire, Des Moines , Iowa, Iowa, Grand Mound , Iowa, Miami, Concord , New Hampshire, Granite, MAGA, Utah, Super, Costa Mesa , California, Texas , Massachusetts, North Carolina , Virginia , Texas
Read previewFormer President Donald Trump easily defeated his former UN Ambassador Nikki Haley on Super Tuesday in every state except Vermont, all but guaranteeing him the Republican Party's presidential nomination. The Republican former president was surprisingly unable to beat Haley in Vermont on Super Tuesday. Today, in state after state, there remains a large block of Republican primary voters who are expressing deep concerns about Donald Trump," Haley national spokesperson Olivia Perez-Cubas said in a statement. As it stands, Haley can still win the nomination, though it'd require handily defeating Trump in state after state, surpassing polling. Despite her win in Vermont, Haley did not give a speech Tuesday evening, while Trump gave one from Mar-a-Lago without mentioning her name once.
Persons: , Donald Trump, Nikki Haley, Trump, Haley, Olivia Perez, Cubas, it'd, NBC's Kristen Welker, we're Organizations: Service, Super, Republican, Business, GOP, Republican National Convention, Trump Locations: Vermont, Utah, California, Milwaukee, Mar
CNN —Nikki Haley suspended her campaign Wednesday morning, leaving former President Donald Trump as the presumptive GOP nominee. Haley’s exit, 51 days after the Iowa caucuses, makes 2024 one of the fastest-narrowing primary fields in recent history. In 2008, Senator John McCain secured the delegates for the Republican nomination on March 4, 61 days after the Iowa caucuses and about a month after that year’s Super Tuesday. No other competitive primary fields since 2004 narrowed to a final candidate within 100 days of the Iowa caucuses. In some instances, losing candidates have remained in the race even after the eventual nominee secured the required delegates.
Persons: Nikki Haley, Donald Trump, Haley’s, John McCain Organizations: CNN, Republican, Trump, GOP Locations: Iowa
Nikki Haley to exit GOP presidential race Wednesday
  + stars: | 2024-03-06 | by ( Kylie Atwood | Arit John | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +12 min
Nikki Haley will announce Wednesday that she is exiting the Republican presidential race, according to sources familiar with her plans, clearing the path for former President Donald Trump. Still, in her campaign, Haley became the first Republican woman to win two primary contests: Vermont and the District of Columbia. Former 2024 candidates, including biotech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott and North Dakota Gov. At the time, Haley was seen as a rising GOP star and potential vice presidential pick in 2012 and 2016. Haley spent six years as governor of South Carolina before becoming Trump’s ambassador to the United Nations in 2017.
Persons: Nikki Haley, Donald Trump, Haley, Trump, Joe Biden, Biden, , ” Trump, Vivek Ramaswamy, South Carolina Sen, Tim Scott, Doug Burgum, Ron DeSantis, Asa Hutchinson, Chris Christie, Chris Sununu, ” Haley, Republicans –, Charles Koch’s, Sununu, beholden, DeSantis, wasn’t, , Ramaswamy, he’s, Haley wasn’t, Barack Obama, Nimarata – Nikki, Nancy Pelosi, MAGA, Barack Obama’s, Haley’s, Mother Emanuel, , , CNN’s Eric Bradner, Ebony Davis Organizations: CNN, Former South Carolina Gov, Republican, United Nations, GOP, Trump, Democratic, District of Columbia, Republican Party, North Dakota Gov, New, Florida Gov, Arkansas Gov, New Jersey Gov, Fox News, eventual, Republicans, White, Mother, Mother Emanuel AME, Confederate, statehouse, UN, Boeing, Associated Press Locations: Charleston , South Carolina, South Carolina, Nevada, Vermont, Iowa, New Hampshire, Arkansas, New Jersey, China, Granite State, United States, Lexington County , South Carolina
Key Takeaways From Super Tuesday
  + stars: | 2024-03-06 | by ( Susan Milligan | March | At A.M. | ) www.usnews.com   time to read: +3 min
Super Tuesday confirmed what Americans already knew: Barring a dramatic event, it's a two-person race now, with a November rematch between President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump. Here are some takeaways:Both Trump and Biden Lost Support to Protest Voters. In Minnesota, the "uncommitted" got 19% of the vote, attributed to unhappiness over Biden's policy toward the Gaza war. Trump, meanwhile, lost Vermont to the now-departed-from-the-race Nikki Haley and lost sizable chunks of the GOP primary electorate to the former South Carolina governor. Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff had two Democratic colleagues, Rep. Katie Porter and Rep. Barbara Lee, vying with him for the top two lines.
Persons: it's, Joe Biden, Donald Trump, Trump, Biden, Nikki Haley, Haley, Adam Schiff, Katie Porter, Barbara Lee, Schiff, Steve Garvey, Garvey, , Jason Palmer –, Palmer, pollsters Organizations: Biden, Democratic National Convention, GOP, South, Democrat, Democratic, Republican, Major League Baseball, Trump Locations: Minnesota, Gaza, Vermont, South Carolina, Oklahoma, Alaska , Alabama, California, Samoa, U.S, American Samoa, Baltimore, South
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailPaul Ryan: Trump would be 'wise' to listen to Haley about appealing to traditional conservativesFormer House Speaker Paul Ryan joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the state of the 2024 race, what's next for Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley, what to make of a Biden-Trump rematch, and more.
Persons: Paul Ryan, Trump, Haley, what's, Nikki Haley Organizations: Former, Republican, Biden, Trump
Elon Musk says he's not going to donate to either Donald Trump or Joe Biden. The New York Times reported that Trump met with Musk while looking for cash for his campaign. AdvertisementThe billionaire Elon Musk wrote on Wednesday morning that he wouldn't be donating "to either candidate" for president, a declaration that came after The New York Times reported that Musk huddled with Donald Trump in Florida. "Just to be super clear, I am not donating money to either candidate for US President," Musk wrote on X.Musk's refusal isn't all that surprising. "I would not vote for Biden," Musk told the journalist Andrew Ross Sorkin at a New York Times event.
Persons: Elon Musk, he's, Donald Trump, Joe Biden, Trump, Musk, , Trump's, Joe Biden's, hasn't, Biden, Andrew Ross Sorkin, I'm, Nikki Haley's, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Kennedy, Nikki Haley Organizations: The New York Times, Service, US, New York Times, Trump, Twitter, Democratic Locations: Florida
Many Americans are dreading a Trump-Biden rematch, but no one feels the anguish quite like a Nikki Haley voter. And I think Donald Trump is horrible.”With Ms. Haley expected to end her 2024 campaign, a crucial new equation is emerging in the electoral math: Where will her voters — and voters like them in key battlegrounds across the country — go in a general election contest between Mr. Trump and President Biden? “The million-dollar question is, will they vote, will they sit it out — or will they vote for Joe Biden?” former Gov. Jim Hodges, a South Carolina Democrat, said of Ms. Haley’s centrist supporters in the state. “A moderate Republican voter in Charleston is not all that different than a moderate Republican voter in the Milwaukee suburbs.”
Persons: Nikki Haley, , Patti Gramling, “ Biden, Donald Trump, Haley, Trump, Biden, Joe Biden, Jim Hodges Organizations: Trump, Biden, South Carolina Republican, South, South Carolina Democrat Locations: Charleston, S.C, South Carolina, Milwaukee
Nikki Haley suspended her presidential campaign on Wednesday morning, former President Donald Trump insulted his former rival — as well as her supporters — before inviting them to support him. "Nikki Haley got TROUNCED last night, in record setting fashion," Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform on Wednesday. On X, a spokesperson for Nikki Haley called out the differences between Trump's and Biden's reactions to the ex-UN ambassador dropping out of the race. AdvertisementIn Biden's statement, he said it "takes a lot of courage to run for President," and applauded Haley for being "willing to speak the truth about Trump." "Donald Trump made it clear he doesn't want Nikki Haley's supporters," the president said.
Persons: , Nikki Haley, Donald Trump, Trump, Haley's, Joe Biden, missive, Haley, who'd, Trump's, Nikki Haley's, Biden, he's Organizations: Service, South Carolina Gov, Radical Left Democrats, Business, Trump, GOP, Biden, UN, Democratic Locations: Charleston, Gaza
download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. Former President Donald Trump has all but secured a rematch with President Joe Biden in November's election after a dominating performance on Super Tuesday. These days, the biggest themes heading into the election range from the personal lives of both candidates to major geopolitical issues. Trump's vice president: Trump's running mate remains a question mark, with plenty of options . Swift backed Biden in 2020 but didn't endorse either candidate when she told her fans to vote on Super Tuesday .
Persons: , Nikki Haley, that's, we've, Chip Somodevilla, Scott Eisen, Donald Trump, Joe Biden, Biden, Trump, Brendan Smialowski, he's, Daniels, Trump's, Sen, Tim Scott of, Vivek Ramaswamy, Kristi Noem, Taylor, Swift, Robert Alexander, Jenny Chang, Rodriguez, Alyssa Powell, Elon Musk, Musk, execs, Roy Rochlin, Bob Iger, It's, Campbell, Dan DeFrancesco, Hallam Bullock, Jordan Parker Erb, George Glover Organizations: Service, Street, Business, Democratic, Trump, NFL, Getty, Musk, Microsoft, Disney, Apple, Vision, Campbell Soup Company Locations: Vermont, Tim Scott of South Carolina, South Dakota, Gaza, Ukraine, Washington, China, Trump, New York, London
Michelle Obama isn't running for president in 2024. The former first lady's office says she's backing Joe Biden and Kamala Harris' reelection campaign. On Tuesday, the former first lady's office told NBC that "she will not be running for president." "Mrs. Obama supports President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris' reelection campaign," said Obama's communications director, Crystal Carson. In 2019, Obama told The National there was "zero chance" of her running.
Persons: Michelle Obama, Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Biden, , Obama, Crystal Carson, Michael Cembalest, Cembalest, hasn't, Gavin Newsom, It's, Donald Trump, Nikki Haley, Trump, Jay Shetty Organizations: Democratic, Service, White, NBC, JPMorgan Asset Management, Democratic National Committee, Super, MSNBC, California Gov, GOP Locations: Washington and Vermont
Nikki Haley is said to be planning to drop out of the presidential race. Donald J. Trump rolled up victories across the country on Super Tuesday, and by the end of the evening it was clear that the former president had left Nikki Haley in the delegate dust. Ms. Haley plans to make it official on Wednesday morning, according to multiple people familiar with her plans, with an event where she will drop out but not immediately offer her endorsement to Mr. Trump. That is important because tucked inside Mr. Trump’s often dominant statewide victories on Tuesday were signs of vulnerability for the fall. He showed some of the same weakness in the swingy suburban areas that cost him the White House in 2020.
Persons: Nikki Haley, Donald J, Trump, , Ms, Haley, Trump’s Organizations: Republican, House Locations: Trump’s, California , North Carolina , Tennessee , Texas, Virginia
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