The Capital

Haley plans long run versus Trump

She’s still raking in donations, building national footprint

- By Jazmine Ulloa

DALLAS — One week before the Republican presidenti­al primary in South Carolina, where polls suggest she trails by an insurmount­able margin, Nikki Haley was in Texas, promising to go national, as most primary candidates, even in the most dire circumstan­ces, usually do.

Despite big losses in Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada, and the steep odds facing her in South Carolina, her home state, Haley is showing no signs of relenting. She is still raking in donations and building out her national footprint as she pledges to move her party past former President Donald Trump.

“He said he’s going to spend more time in a courtroom than he is going to be on the campaign trail,” she said last week when she was in San Antonio, referring to the hours he spent in New York last week facing criminal and civil cases. “But let me tell you what we are going to be doing. We are going to be on the campaign trail.”

Haley, a former governor of South Carolina and a United Nations ambassador in the Trump administra­tion, is projecting confidence even as her path to victory looks stark. In many South Carolina polls, she trails Trump by roughly 30 points — and the picture beyond next week’s contest does not look much brighter.

If Haley continues with her plans to stay in the race beyond South Carolina, as she has pledged, here is a look at how she intends to take her bid national.

The Haley campaign has announced teams of elected officials, business leaders

Nikki Haley, the former governor of South Carolina and a Republican presidenti­al candidate, speaks during a town hall Sunday hosted by Fox News co-anchor John Roberts in Columbia, South Carolina. RUTH FREMSON/THE NEW YORK TIMES and prominent community members to help lead its efforts in Alaska, California, Georgia, Idaho, Massachuse­tts, Minnesota, Utah and Washington. Her National Women for Nikki Coalition, which counts chapters in all 50 states and Puerto Rico, has kicked into full gear, with a mission to court suburban women turned off by Trump.

On the day after the South Carolina primary, regardless of the outcome, Haley has said she will head to Michigan, which holds its own contest Feb. 27. From there, she has plans to crisscross the country before Super Tuesday, the largest single day of the primary season and the last real chance she will have to prove that she can change the course of the nomination. The expected stops include Colorado, Minnesota, Utah and Virginia.

Haley is betting her candidacy on courting independen­ts and new Republican­s in Michigan and in 11 Super Tuesday states where Republican primaries are not limited to voters affiliated with her party.

But that strategy did not succeed in New Hampshire. And she has shown weaknesses with her own base: She received support from only 29% of college-educated Republican­s nationally, according to a CNN poll, while Trump had 55% of the same demographi­c. Another tracking poll by Morning Consult showed Haley trailing Trump by big margins in every Super Tuesday state.

Trump has undertaken his own push in Super Tuesday states, announcing nearly 80 endorsemen­ts from the state party and elected officials in 14 states. And his team has left little to chance: He and his allies have engaged in a backroom campaign to twist delegate rules in his favor, and he has said Haley’s donors would be “permanentl­y barred from the MAGA camp.”

Haley and her allies have kept up a steady drumbeat of criticism on Trump in national media appearance­s and in television and digital ads. Her message has remained consistent: that it is time for a new generation­al leader who can move the Republican Party beyond the “chaos” that is Trump.

But her attack lines to underscore that most recently have become sharper-edged and more numerous. She has criticized him for disparagin­g her husband, Maj. Michael Haley; for suggesting that he would encourage Russian aggression against U.S. allies in Europe; for skewing the delegate count; and for tightening his grip over party institutio­ns, including the Republican National

Committee.

She has continued to blast Trump for spending time and campaign donations on his legal troubles. She has sought to brand him and President Joe Biden as “grumpy old men.”

But as of last week, Haley had not spent any money on television ads beyond Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina. Her allied super political action committee, Stand for America Inc., had invested only about $144,900 in other states, according to AdImpact, a media-tracking firm. The Trump campaign, by comparison, had spent nearly six times as much, or about $855,200, nationwide.

Pointing to Haley’s losses, Karoline Leavitt, Trump’s national press secretary, contended he would “crush” her in her own backyard and “demolish her on Super Tuesday.”

Trump’s war chest dwarfs

Haley’s campaign funds. He had more than $33 million cash on hand at the end of December, while she had $14.6 million.

But as it has been from the start of her campaign, one bright spot for Haley is her ability to raise money. She pulled in $16.5 million in January, her highest monthly total so far. She has the backing of a number of wealthy donors. Her campaign turned Trump’s ultimatum against her donors into an opportunit­y to sell about 20,000 T-shirts that read “Barred. Permanentl­y.” This month, she brought in $2.7 million at fundraiser­s in Texas and California, according to her campaign, and $1 million more in the 48 hours after Trump disparaged Haley’s husband at a rally.

In interviews, some of Haley’s high-dollar donors in Texas and California echoed her focus on Trump’s and Biden’s advanced ages, and cited Trump’s legal cases as signs that anything remains possible in the race. A New York judge ordered him Friday to pay a penalty of nearly $355 million plus interest after finding him liable for conspiring to manipulate his net worth.

“A lot can happen in politics and in our legal system,” said Timothy Draper, a Silicon Valley entreprene­ur and Haley donor. “And the American people usually come to their senses when they come to the polls.”

At Gilley’s Dallas South Side Music Hall, an upscale honky-tonk, Jack Matthews, its owner and a prominent developer, said he was having an easier time raising money for Haley now than when he started in the early days of her campaign.

“Some people are afraid of supporting her because of retributio­n with Trump,” he said. But plenty of others, he said, “are saying, ‘We need a change.’ ”

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