Las Vegas Review-Journal

Nikki Haley may be out, but she stirred a pot that needed stirring

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Nikki Haley suspended her campaign for the Republican presidenti­al nomination Wednesday, after winning only one state on Super Tuesday. But the scrappy Republican’s influence on the 2024 nomination elevated the discussion. It also held up a stark mirror to the GOP’S capitulati­on to former President Donald Trump.

The Seattle Times editorial board strongly endorsed President Joe Biden last month, not just for the Democratic nomination, but for the whole shebang — again. Our Feb. 2 Biden endorsemen­t read:

“Through it all, Biden has taken the high road, neither demeaning himself nor his position by engaging in the sort of vulgar political food fights so favored by former President Donald Trump. Four years ago, Biden said he would restore dignity to the White House. He has kept his word,” the board wrote.

But given that primaries often require voters to pick a party, we also offered Republican­s advice for a candidate on the Republican side. That was Haley. Hands down.

By any measure, the conservati­ve’s views, including on abortion rights, are far afield of the editorial board’s positions.

Neverthele­ss, Haley, former South Carolina governor and United Nations ambassador, showed her mettle in making her case that the GOP had to move on from Trump. The only woman among more than a dozen Republican challenger­s, the men fell like bowling pins, obsequious in their gentle challenges and enthusiast­ic in their sudden endorsemen­ts of the man who led an insurrecti­on to overturn his 2020 defeat by Biden.

“While Trump fawns over the dictators of Russia and North Korea, she is on to them and the geopolitic­al threats they pose,” the Feb. 2 editorial read. “While Trump is making up names for his adversarie­s, she is lamenting eighth-grade test scores. While he is demanding House Republican­s resist a solution for the U.S. border crisis so he can use it as a campaign cudgel, she wants it prioritize­d and is not averse to compromise. While Trump and the right-wing media spin up the Taylor Swift conspiracy endorsemen­t theory, she laughs and says, ‘I don’t get it.’ Then adds that she has taken her daughter to one of the star’s concerts and enjoyed it.”

By Wednesday, Haley had won only 89 delegates to Trump’s 995. Resplenden­t in red and atop her storied five-inch heels, the daughter of immigrants announced she was suspending her campaign. Significan­tly, Haley did not endorse the former president. She warned him he had to make a strong case to win over her supporters.

She also reiterated her concerns about the future of the country, including the crushing national debt and congressio­nal dysfunctio­n, including its retreat from support of Ukraine and other allies. Trump has fanned that dysfunctio­n and dismissed U.S. alliances. The contrast between the two remains stark.

Haley is out, but she stirred a pot that needed to be stirred. And that has been a service to the national debate about presidenti­al leadership.

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