Haley to launch ad buy in Super Tuesday states, Trump potential VP picks
speak at CPAC
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[February 24, 2024]
By Gram Slattery and Tim Reid
COLUMBIA, South Carolina (Reuters) -Nikki Haley's campaign will launch a
"seven-figure" ad buy aimed at Super Tuesday states, campaign manager
Betsy Ankney told reporters on Friday, a signal that Haley plans to
continue campaigning for the Republican nomination even if she loses by
a large margin in South Carolina.
Ankney did not disclose any details of the ad buy, including which
markets will be targeted. Fifteen states and one U.S. territory will
hold Republican nominating contests on Super Tuesday, which falls on
March 5 this year.
Haley has already pledged to fight on no matter the result of the South
Carolina primary on Saturday. Former President Donald Trump is leading
in the state by over 30 percentage points, according to most surveys.
In the call with reporters on Friday, Ankney acknowledged that Haley
that faces a daunting path ahead if she is to overtake Trump, who holds
a 60-point lead in most national polls.
"We know that the math is challenging, but this has never just been
about who can win a Republican primary," Ankney said. "This battle is
about who can win in November, defeat the Democrats and finally get our
country back on track."
In other news from the U.S. presidential race:
Haley and Trump both hit the trail in South Carolina on the eve of
Saturday's primary.
Haley was traveling on her blue Haley-themed bus to two events on
Friday, while Trump was holding a "Get Out The Vote" rally and then
delivering the keynote speech at the Black Conservative Federation's
annual gala in Columbia.
Haley’s first campaign stop of the day took place in the small town of
Moncks Corner, where she attacked Trump for being unelectable in a
general election and for trying to force the Republican National
Committee to declare him the presumptive nominee.
"We don't anoint kings in America," she told a crowd of about 100 voters
gathered in a small plaza.
Andrew Tozzolino, 62, who attended the event, said: "I think she
represents reason."
"I don’t agree with everything she says," he added. "But given the
choice between her and the former President Trump, to me, it's a
no-brainer."
VP AUDITIONS
As Trump prepared for his South Carolina showdown with Haley, a number
of his potential running mates were touting their support for him at the
2024 Conservative Political Action Conference, known as CPAC, a few
miles from Washington.
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Republican presidential candidate and former U.S. Ambassador to the
United Nations Nikki Haley speaks during a campaign stop ahead of
the South Carolina Republican presidential primary election in
Moncks Corner, South Carolina, U.S. February 23, 2024. REUTERS/Brian
Snyder
With Trump close to clinching his party's presidential nomination,
CPAC organizers are holding a straw poll on Saturday that gives
attendees the chance to say who they would like as his vice
president.
The vice presidential straw poll question, the first time one has
been included at CPAC in over a decade, gives activists 17 options.
Many of the names on the list were speakers at the three-day
conference, which ends Saturday.
They include South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem; New York
congresswoman Elise Stefanik; U.S. Senator J.D. Vance; Ben Carson, a
former Trump cabinet official and 2016 presidential candidate; Byron
Donalds, a Florida congressman; and Kari Lake, a U.S. Senate
candidate in Arizona and right-wing firebrand.
After Donalds spoke at the conference on Thursday, he was asked by
Reuters if was interested in the running mate gig. "Oh yeah, I'd do
it," he said.
At a Fox News town hall event on Tuesday, Trump said Donalds and
Noem were on his shortlist.
Trump also said former presidential rivals Vivek Ramaswamy, due to
speak at CPAC on Saturday, and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, who
was not appearing at CPAC, were on that list, along with Tulsi
Gabbard, a former Democratic congresswoman turned independent who
spoke glowingly about Trump at CPAC on Thursday night.
Ramaswamy and DeSantis have both endorsed Trump since dropping out
of the Republican presidential nominating contest.
Haley, who has said she does not want to be Trump's running mate, is
also included in the straw poll question. She was invited to attend
CPAC but declined to attend. Trump is speaking at the conference on
Saturday before heading back to South Carolina.
(Reporting by Gram Slattery in Columbia, South Carolina and Tim Reid
in WashingtonAdditional reporting by Alexandra Ulmer, Steve Holland
and Costas Pitas; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Alistair Bell)
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