Nikki Haley set to win Nevada Republican primary, but victory will be
hollow
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[February 06, 2024]
By Jarrett Renshaw and Tim Reid
LAS VEGAS (Reuters) - Nikki Haley, the last remaining rival to
frontrunner Donald Trump for the Republican presidential nomination, is
set to win Nevada's primary on Tuesday, but it will be a hollow victory
as Trump will secure all of the state's delegates in a separate contest
on Thursday.
President Joe Biden is expected to easily win Tuesday's Democratic
primary after dominating his party's first nominating contest, in South
Carolina, on Saturday.
For Republican voters in Nevada, Tuesday's state-run Republican ballot
only has former U.N. ambassador Haley as a major candidate. She is
therefore all but guaranteed to win, but it's largely meaningless.
That's because only candidates participating in a separate Republican
caucus on Thursday can compete for the state's 26 delegates to the
Republican National Convention in July when the party formally nominates
its candidate.
The rival caucus is being run by the Trump-friendly state party, and
only Trump is on that ballot, almost certainly guaranteeing him victory
on Thursday and all the state's delegates.
Voters can participate in both the Republican primary on Tuesday and the
Republican caucus on Thursday.
In Tuesday's Republican primary, there is a "none of the above" option.
Joe Lombardo, the state's Republican governor and a Trump supporter, has
said he will vote "none of the above" on Tuesday and caucus for Trump on
Thursday, meaning Haley's main "challenger" on Tuesday will likely be
Trump supporters marking "none of the above" on their primary ballots.
The competing Republican ballots are the result of a conflict between
the state Republican Party - run by Trump allies - and a 2021 state law
that mandates a primary must be held.
Presidential nominating caucuses are run by state political parties, not
the state, and the Trump-friendly Nevada Republican Party decided to
stick with a caucus on Feb. 8. Party leaders viewed a caucus as helping
Trump, because of his superior ground game in the state.
In a visit to Nevada last week, Trump urged voters to ignore Tuesday's
primary and to only vote in Thursday's caucus.
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Republican U.S. presidential candidate Nikki Haley, former governor
of South Carolina and former U.S. ambassador to the U.N. speaks
during the Republican Jewish Coalition Annual Leadership Summit in
Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. October 28, 2023. REUTERS/Steve Marcus/File
Photo
Trump is close to clinching the Republican presidential nomination
after back-to-back wins in Iowa and New Hampshire, and he and Biden
are setting their sights on each other ahead of a likely general
election rematch in November.
Haley is vowing to stay in the Republican nominating race and on to
a potential last stand in her home state of South Carolina on Feb.
24, but she has no clear path to the nomination. She trails Trump
badly in South Carolina according to opinion polls.
Biden campaigned in Nevada on Sunday and Monday. He will appear on
the ballot along with self-help author Marianne Williamson and other
lesser-known Democratic challengers. U.S. Representative Dean
Phillips of Minnesota missed the filing deadline and won't appear on
the ballot.
Despite what look like foregone conclusions in Nevada's nominating
contests, it will be a hotly contested battleground state because
its population can swing to either party and play a decisive role in
November's presidential election.
In 2020, Biden narrowly beat Trump in Nevada by 2.4 percentage
points. Opinion polls show a likely rematch between Biden and Trump
in the swing state will be close.
About 30% of Nevada's population is self-described as Latino or
Hispanic on the U.S. Census, and Republicans are making some inroads
with these voters nationwide.
Nevada also has many potential swing voters: there are 768,000
registered as "non-partisan", more than those registered as either
Democrat or Republican, according to the latest state figures.
(Reporting by Jarrett Renshaw in Las Vegas and Tim Reid in
Washington, Editing by Ross Colvin and Howard Goller)
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