Nikki Haley allies, facing daunting odds, place last bets on 'Super
Tuesday'
Send a link to a friend
[February 20, 2024]
By Gram Slattery
ROCK HILL, South Carolina (Reuters) - Backers of Nikki Haley's quest for
the Republican presidential nomination are pouring money into states
that hold early March nominating contests in a bid to keep her candidacy
alive, regulatory filings and pro-Haley political operatives said.
Those efforts have ramped up in recent days and reflect a growing belief
that Haley will not pull off an upset win in her home state of South
Carolina, where former President Donald Trump holds a deep well of
support.
The former governor has been crisscrossing the state ahead of its
Saturday primary but has largely failed to chip away at Trump's lead in
opinion polls of more than 30 points
Six analysts and people supporting Haley's nomination now say the former
U.S. ambassador to the United Nations will have her best - and last -
shot to claw back into the race during the first five days of March.
That's when voters from 21 states and territories go to polls, most of
them on March 5 for "Super Tuesday." Many of those states, like
Massachusetts and Virginia, are laced with college-educated suburbanites
who turned out for Haley in earlier nominating contests elsewhere.
"South Carolina is a really rough state. It's a very Trump-friendly
state," said Robert Schwartz, the co-founder of Primary Pivot, an
outside super PAC supporting Haley's bid.
"Our hope is that Nikki Haley can make it respectable in South Carolina
and move on to Super Tuesday."
The long-shot bet on early March underscores how some donors are willing
to stick by her, even though she lost the first four nominating contests
by huge margins. Around a dozen donors, fundraisers and advisers to
donors told Reuters they believe Trump's four pending criminal cases
could force him out, leaving Haley the heir apparent, while others
simply like having an anti-Trump candidate.
Primary Pivot, which has raised about $1 million from big- and
small-dollar donors, is targeting independent voters and Democrats who
opt to vote in Republican primaries. Schwartz said the group has sent
text messages promoting Haley to voters in Maine, Massachusetts,
Colorado and Virginia -- all Super Tuesday states.
The group recently hired advisers in Michigan and Virginia and is
looking to recruit staff in Massachusetts and Minnesota, Schwartz added.
Many of those states are seen likely to vote for Democratic President
Joe Biden in the Nov. 5 election, and primary victories there may do
little to help Haley win the support of Republican voters elsewhere in
the country.
Americans for Prosperity Action, a super PAC supporting Haley backed by
conservative billionaire Charles Koch, has also ramped up its activity
in states that vote in March, according to filings submitted to the
Federal Election Commission.
After a lull throughout most of February, the group disclosed on Friday
it spent $100,000 for campaign workers to go house to house for
conversations with voters in Tennessee and North Carolina, as well as
$75,000 for more door-knocking in Virginia.
[to top of second column]
|
Republican presidential candidate and former U.S. Ambassador to the
United Nations Nikki Haley makes a campaign visit ahead of the
Republican presidential primary election in Sumter, South Carolina,
U.S. February 19, 2024. REUTERS/Randall Hill
Stand for America, another pro-Haley super PAC, has focused its
spending on South Carolina. But it put a little over $2,000 towards
anti-Trump text messaging in Texas last week, disclosures showed,
and it is studying a move into Super Tuesday states, a person with
knowledge of the group's activities said.
'ONLY STRATEGY SHE'S GOT'
Even Haley's supporters concede her chances of pulling off an upset
in the Republican nomination battle are exceedingly remote.
"I think it's the only strategy she's got," Chip Felkel, a veteran
South Carolina Republican operative, said of the decision to focus
on March's nominating contests. "She'll lose South Carolina by a
considerable margin."
While state-level polling is inconsistent, no poll has shown Haley
ahead in any state.
Trump's campaign is confident it can wrap up the nomination by
March 19, based on a mix of public and proprietary polling, a senior
campaign official said.
Senior Trump adviser Jason Miller on Sunday shared a series of poll
results on the social media site X showing Haley well behind in
eight Super Tuesday states.
About half of all delegates, who in turn select a nominee at the
party's national convention in July, will have been awarded by the
end of Super Tuesday. That means Haley needs to perform credibly in
early March, or she will come perilously close to being
mathematically eliminated from the contest.
Haley herself said in late January she needed to do better in South
Carolina than she did in New Hampshire, where she lost to Trump by
roughly 11 points. She has avoided commenting on concrete goals
since.
Haley has already campaigned in California and Texas, both Super
Tuesday states, and her campaign has rolled out leadership teams in
at least five states - Alaska, Massachusetts, Idaho, Utah and
Washington - that vote in early March.
Matthew Ingham, a 38-year-old truck driver at a Haley event in
Sumter on Monday, said he does not think Haley needs to win in South
Carolina. But that she needed a "strong push" to win some of the
contests down the line, adding, "She can't keep coming in second."
(Reporting by Gram Slattery in Rock Hill, South Carolina,
additional reporting by Nathan Layne in Sumter, South Carolina;
Editing by Scott Malone and Cynthia Osterman)
[© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved.]This material
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|