Santa Fe New Mexican

Haley hints she isn’t bound to support GOP nominee

- By Todd C. Frankel

Former South Carolina governor Nikki Haley said Sunday she no longer feels bound by the earlier pledge made by her and other presidenti­al hopefuls to support the GOP’s eventual nominee — widely expected to be former President Donald Trump.

The Republican National Committee made that pledge a key condition for candidates who wanted to participat­e in the party’s debates. Haley acknowledg­ed in an interview on NBC’s Meet The Press the pledge was a requiremen­t at the time but added the party has changed since then.

“The RNC is now not the same RNC,” she said.

The organizati­on finds itself in tumult as Trump has moved to take control. He suggested his daughter-inlaw and two others take over as RNC leaders even before RNC Chair Ronna McDaniel stepped down, a decision she announced last week.

When asked directly if she would endorse Trump if she dropped out, she wouldn’t answer but said she has “serious concerns about Donald Trump. I have even more concerns about Joe Biden.”

Haley, the last Republican candidate still standing against Trump, has been getting trounced by the former president in recent state nomination contests. She’s lost by wide margins in Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada. She was also beaten by Trump by about 20 points in her home state of South Carolina last month.

Haley has pledged to stay in the presidenti­al race at least until this week’s Super Tuesday, when 16 states hold nominating contests.

Haley, the former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, had participat­ed in debates along with former GOP hopefuls including Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and tech entreprene­ur Vivek Ramaswamy. The pledge also said the candidates would forgo any third-party bid of their own. Trump, who didn’t participat­e in the debates, refused to sign a loyalty pledge.

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