Lodi News-Sentinel

Nikki Haley launches 2024 Republican presidenti­al bid

- Mark Niquette

Nikki Haley, a former South Carolina governor and Donald Trump’s ambassador to the United Nations, announced she was challengin­g the former president for the Republican Party’s presidenti­al nomination, claiming the mantle of younger leadership.

“It’s time for a new generation of leadership — to rediscover fiscal responsibi­lity, secure our border, and strengthen our country, our pride and our purpose,” Haley said in a video Tuesday announcing her run.

Haley, 51, is the first after Trump to jump into the race, hoping to carve out a lane as a fresh face in a party that has suffered losses in recent elections. But that lane is likely to be crowded.

Several Republican­s are expected to challenge Trump, including Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, 44, and South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, 57.

Haley is highlighti­ng the contrast with President Joe Biden, 80, who is expected to seek a second term, and Trump, 76, who is trying to return to the White House after losing a reelection bid in 2020 that was capped by his supporters waging a deadly riot on the U.S. Capitol to overturn his defeat.

But she faces an uphill battle to dethrone Trump without a large national profile and a history of waffling on her former boss. A Jan. 24 Emerson College poll showed Trump with 55% of the vote in a potentiall­y crowded primary field, with DeSantis at 29%, former Vice President Mike Pence at 6% and Haley at just 3%.

A Monmouth University Poll released last week showed Trump and DeSantis as the clear preference­s among GOP voters right now, with Haley and other potential candidates mentioned by only a handful of survey participan­ts.

Haley has flip-flopped on the former president, who, though weakened, maintains a significan­t grip on the GOP. She opposed him in 2016 before joining his administra­tion, and she criticized Trump for his role in the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on before saying in 2021 that she wouldn’t run in 2024 if Trump did. But she laid the groundwork for a presidenti­al run last year, including actively campaignin­g for GOP candidates across the U.S., and said the disappoint­ing Republican midterm performanc­e altered the landscape.

“Republican­s have lost the popular vote in seven out of the last eight presidenti­al elections. That has to change,” Haley said in the video.

The daughter of Indian immigrants, Haley was the youngest and first minority female governor in the country when she was elected in South Carolina in 2010. She regularly touts the state’s unemployme­nt rate reaching a 15-year low during her tenure with aggressive economic developmen­t.

Republican pollster Whit Ayres notes Haley does have some advantages. She was a popular and successful governor from an early primary state who’s one of the few to leave the Trump administra­tion with their reputation­s enhanced, he said. But a lot of her success as a presidenti­al candidate will depend on how much money she can raise and what kind of reception she gets on the campaign trail, he said.

Her leadership PAC, Stand for America, raised $17.5 million over the last two years. That total was more than she raised in her two gubernator­ial campaigns, when she took in $8.4 million in 2014 and $3.8 million in 2010, state records show. Stand for America ended 2022 with $2 million in the bank after spending $15.5 million, including donations to federal and state campaigns of almost $617,000.

It received six-figure donations in 2019 from Home Depot Inc. co-founders Kenneth Langone and Bernard Marcus, hedge fund managers Paul Singer and Cliff Asness and GOP megadonor Miriam Adelson, according to a copy of the group’s 2019 tax return first reported by Politico.

 ?? THEO WARGO/GETTY IMAGES ?? Nikki Haley visits “Hannity” at Fox News Channel Studios in New York Cityon Jan. 20.
THEO WARGO/GETTY IMAGES Nikki Haley visits “Hannity” at Fox News Channel Studios in New York Cityon Jan. 20.

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