Haley loses Republican Nevada primary to 'none of these candidates'
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[February 07, 2024]
By Tim Reid and Jarrett Renshaw
(Reuters) -Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley suffered an
embarrassing defeat in Nevada's primary on Tuesday, finishing behind
ballots marked "none of these candidates" by supporters of Donald Trump,
according to Edison Research.
Haley, the last remaining rival to frontrunner Trump for the Republican
presidential nomination, was the only major Republican candidate
contesting the party's Nevada primary on Tuesday. Trump was not on the
ballot.
U.S. President Joe Biden easily won Nevada's Democratic presidential
primary after dominating his party's first nominating contest in South
Carolina on Saturday.
With more than 70% of votes counted, Biden had 90% support. Biden, as an
incumbent president, faces little opposition within his own party to
running for re-election in a likely general election rematch with Trump
in November.
Former President Trump will secure all of Nevada’s delegates in a
separate caucus vote on Thursday, as he moves closer to clinching the
nomination after back-to-back wins in Iowa and New Hampshire.
Trump did not compete in Tuesday's primary, which carried no weight in
the Republican presidential nominating contest. Haley is not on the
ballot in Thursday's caucus.
Republican voters could mark their ballots "none of these candidates" in
Tuesday's primary, and Haley has infuriated Trump by refusing to drop
out of the Republican nominating contest.
With over two-thirds of the Republican ballots counted, Haley had 32% of
the votes, with "none of these candidates" at over 61% and the winner,
according to Edison Research.
The rival Republican caucus on Thursday is being run by the
Trump-friendly state party, and with only Trump on that ballot, he is
almost certainly guaranteed victory and all of the state's 26 delegates
to the Republican National Convention in July, when the party formally
nominates its candidate.
Voters can participate in both the Republican primary on Tuesday and the
Republican caucus on Thursday.
Joe Lombardo, Nevada's Republican governor and a Trump supporter, had
said he would vote "none of these candidates" on Tuesday and caucus for
Trump on Thursday.
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.
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Republican presidential candidate and former U.S. Ambassador to the
United Nations Nikki Haley speaks while attending a campaign event
at Indian Land High School's auditorium in Lancaster, South
Carolina, U.S. February 2, 2024. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton/File
Photo
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. In a visit to Nevada last
week, Trump urged voters to ignore Tuesday's primary and only vote
in Thursday's caucus.
Haley has vowed 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. After his victory,
he immediately set his sights on Trump, saying in a statement:
"Donald Trump is trying to divide us, not unite us; drag us back to
the past, not lead us to the future."
Biden appeared 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 Tuesday's results in Nevada having little impact on the
nominating contests, the state will be a hotly contested
battleground because its population can swing to either party and
play a significant role in November's presidential election.
In 2020, Biden beat Trump in Nevada by 2.4 percentage points.
Opinion polls show a likely rematch between Biden and Trump in the
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 Tim Reid and Jarrett Renshaw. Editing by Ross Colvin,
Howard Goller and Gerry Doyle)
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