Haley’s decision to suspend her campaign comes after she outlasted 12 other male Republican candidates who also wanted to run for president.
Most of those challengers, including Florida governor Ron DeSantis, biotech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy and South Carolina Senator Tim Scott, have since endorsed Trump, and some are now hoping for a place in a future Trump administration.
The two-term governor began her bid for the nomination one year ago, treading carefully for fear of angering Trump’s base, but spent the past few months painting him and Biden as too old and mentally unfit for the presidency, and depicting Trump as a chaos agent with a history of losing general elections.
Haley’s departure kick-starts an almost certain rematch between the 81-year-old president and his 77-year-old predecessor, despite polls showing most Americans don’t want to endure such a contest.
While both men have not yet secured the required number of delegates they need to clinch the nomination, their near-clean sweep of the Super Tuesday primary and caucus races means that it is only a matter of time before they officially become the presumptive nominee for their respective parties.
Biden, according to a strategy campaign memo, will use his State of the Union address on Thursday night (Friday AEDT) to articulate the “stark choice” voters face between his “historically popular record of accomplishment” and Trump’s “dark” and “dangerous” vision for the country.
Trump, meanwhile, used his speech on Tuesday night to pivot to the November 5 election, declaring it would be “the single most important day in the history of our country”. He also focused heavily on the issues central to his campaign: immigration, crime, and the “weaponisation” of the justice system that has indicted him four times on criminal charges. He did not mention Haley at all, but called for “unity” in the Republican party.
But while Trump now an iron grip on his party, Haley’s performance in the primaries exposed weaknesses that could plague him in his attempt to return to power.
In the early voting states, Haley picked up a significant share of voters who remain resistant to the former president.
This included 43 per cent of voters in New Hampshire, 40 per cent in South Carolina, 27 per cent in Michigan, and 19 per cent in Iowa, when several other candidates, including DeSantis, were still in the mix.
On Super Tuesday, she also won a significant share of Republican primary and independent voters, including a victory in Vermont, and had earlier picked up Washington DC. But she was unable to secure anywhere near enough delegates to slow Trump’s momentum.
Both Trump and Biden will now seek to woo Haley’s voters in what is expected to be an extremely close race, where voter turnout could make all the difference.
“I said I wanted Americans to have their voices heard. I have done that. I have no regrets,” Haley said in her speech.
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“And although I will no longer be a candidate, I will not stop using my voice for the things I believe in.” This, she said, included fiscal responsibility and standing by allies such as Ukraine and Taiwan, in “a world on fire.”
Haley’s refusal to endorse Trump today also comes after she signed a pledge last year as a condition of taking part in the Republican debate to back whoever won the nomination.
However, Trump won’t be formally announced as the GOP nominee until the Republican convention in June, and some believe she could change her mind and back the president in order to shore up more support within the party ahead of the next election, or to be viewed as the alternative candidate if Trump was no longer able to run.
Explaining her decision today, Haley said: “I have always been a conservative Republican and always supported the Republican nominee. But on this question, as she did on so many others, Margaret Thatcher provided some good advice when she said ‘Never just follow the crowd. Always make up your own mind’.”
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Source Agencies