Nikki Haley

Fairgoers mingle with five GOP presidential candidates on Day 2 of Iowa State Fair

Five GOP presidential candidates were at the Iowa State Fair Friday, mixing campaign speeches and talking with Iowans with traditional fair activities like grilling pork chops and taking a peek at the Butter Cow.

North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, former Vice President Mike Pence and California talk show host Larry Elder were all return visitors to the Des Moines Iowa State Fairgrounds.

Pence told the crowd at the Des Moines Register Political Soapbox Thursday that he and his wife, Karen Pence, had plans to visit the livestock barns, while Burgum told Gov. Kim Reynolds at a morning “fair-side chat” that he wanted to try a “rattlesnake on a stick.”

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'Falling off a cliff': Could DeSantis campaign flame out entirely?

ORLANDO, Fla. — As Gov. Ron DeSantis plummets in the GOP presidential primary polls, his status as option number two in case anything happens to Donald Trump is getting more precarious. He’s battling native son and daughter Tim Scott and Nikki Haley in South Carolina. He’s neck and neck in some polls with businessman Vivek Ramaswamy and could become the target of everyone who doesn’t want to attack Trump directly. His campaign is laying off staff to try to cut spending as contributions dry up and mired in a debate about whether slaves developed beneficial skills for later in life. It’s also un...

Anti-Trump donors have created his 'dream scenario' by spreading cash across packed field of challengers: report

Republicans who oppose Donald Trump could be helping him win the party's presidential nomination by spreading their donations to his various rivals instead of coalescing around a single challenger, according to a report.

Billionaire donors like Charles Koch and Jeffrey Yass have contributed to anti-Trump super PACs, while other major donors like Joe Craft and Stan Druckenmiller are backing candidates still polling in single digits, but no rival has emerged from the GOP pack to give the former president a challenge, reported Bloomberg.

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'Sinking' DeSantis in danger of falling out of second place: ex-Trump official

A Republican operative who worked in the Trump administration said that Ron DeSantis’ crumbling campaign has created an opening for a new No. 2 in the Republican presidential race.

But Alyssa Farah Griffin, who served as Donald Trump’s White House director of strategic communications and now co-hosts "The View," said during an appearance on CNN’s “The Source with Kaitlan Collins” that any candidate serious about making a run at the nomination will have to take a more aggressive stance against her former boss.

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Wealthy GOP donors are sitting on their wallets because they want 'anybody other than Trump'

With the first Republican Party 2024 presidential debate less the four weeks away, big-money GOP donors are holding onto their cash in the hope that another candidate breaks from the pack and gives them an alternative to the embattled Donald Trump.

During an appearance on MSNBC's "Morning Joe," longtime political journalist David Drucker claimed that doubts about whether the indicted former president can be successful in the 2024 general election has dampened enthusiasm for donating early as donors watch for a breakout star who is not named Trump and one who will take the ex-president on.

Speaking with host Jonathan Lemire, Drucker of "The Dispatch" reported, "I spoke to three Republican donors last week who jumped in early for [former Gov.] Nikki Haley but when I checked with them about their colleagues, other wealthy Republican donors, the kind that write big checks to super PACs and I said, where are they right now?"

"And where they are is different than donors were in 2016, the last open primary," he continued. "In the last open primary, you had donors picking their favorite candidate, knowing even if it wasn't their horse that won in the end, they were going to be able to get behind the eventual nominee and be happy about it. This time the broad consensus among Republican donors is that they want anybody other than Trump, and a lot of them are going to wait to see if one emerges."

RELATED: 'We can see the Republican train derailing' as they head for a 'political disaster': analyst

"They don't want to contribute to a split field, even though there is a split field without them," he elaborated. "But they don't want to give anybody false hope and financial life in this race, keeping them around so the field continues to stay split. What they're hoping is that over time a sort of consensus alternative emerges."

"Again, they don't care so much necessarily whether they like the Republican that emerges in that position, they just want someone to emerge, then they'd get behind him and hope they can do some damage," he added.

Watch below or at the link.

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'We’ve got to have a new generation': Nikki Haley on McConnell

Former South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley, a 2024 GOP candidate, shared her thoughts Sunday on U.S. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell's (R-Kentucky) recent health scare and whether the longtime Republican leader should maintain his role, The Messenger reports.

For nearly 20 seconds, the 81-year-old senator suddenly froze mid-sentence during a news conference earlier this week, before eventually returning about ten minutes later to resume interview.

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'I want all of this to go away': Nikki Haley still wants to pardon Trump despite obstruction charge

Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley confirmed on Sunday that she still wants to pardon former President Donald Trump despite a new obstruction of justice charge.

During an interview on Face the Nation, host Margaret Brennan asked Haley if she would pardon Trump after he was accused of trying to delete videotapes showing possible criminal acts at Mar-a-Lago.

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'Running to stay out of prison': Iowa Republicans cheer Trump and boo Will Hurd for dig at criminal charges

Iowa Republicans emphasized they were open to hearing from all 13 presidential candidates Friday at the state party’s Lincoln Dinner, but many in the audience were ready to send former President Donald Trump back for a rematch.

“In Iowa, we are a neutral, objective state,” Republican Party of Iowa Chairman Jeff Kaufmann said. “We’re going to give everybody a fair chance.”

The rules were the same for all 13 of the Republican 2024 presidential candidates: 10 minutes and the microphone was cut off. While all candidates had equal time, they did not meet an equally enthusiastic audience.

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'They’re terrified' of Trump: Presidential historian accuses GOP primary rivals of cowardice

Presidential historian Michael Beschloss on Tuesday slammed Republican presidential candidates who despite some notable exceptions have largely avoided criticizing Donald Trump over the former president’s role in undermining American democracy.

Beschloss accused the GOP candidates “cowardice” during an appearance on MSNBC’s “The Reid Out with Joy Reid.”

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Trump in trouble: Candidates return to Iowa caucus trail as new poll shows an opening for challengers

Former President Donald Trump has kept a hold on his frontrunner position as candidates head back to the Iowa campaign trail, but new polling shows there could be room for others to gain footing in the field.

A Fox Business poll of Iowa Republicans published Sunday found Trump had the largest base of support with 46% of likely Republican caucusgoers choosing the former president. But no candidate has a lock on the position of Trump’s strongest challenger.

While former Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis kept his second-place position, he was 30 points behind Trump with just 16% of caucusgoers supporting him. U.S. Sen. Tim Scott came in third at 11%, and all other candidates earned single digits or less.

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'Get out of the race, stop wasting our time!' Ex-RNC head goes off on Nikki Haley over latest Trump comments

On Monday morning, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley (R-SC) told the host of CNBC's "Squawk Box" that she would vote for DonaldTrump if he is the 2024 GOP presidential nominee, just moments before saying it would be devastating for him to be the nominee and that he can't win because of his legal problems.

Responding to her bizarre flip-flop, former RNC chair Michael Steele lambasted her for still campaigning for the nomination that he said she has no chance of landing while sucking up to the former president.

In the clip shown by MSNBC's Chris Jansing, Haley exclaimed, "I would support him [Trump] because I am not going to have a President Kamala Harris. We can’t afford that. That is not going to happen,” before admitting, "We can’t have, as Republicans, him as the nominee. He can’t win a general election. That’s the problem. We’ve got to go and have someone who can actually win.”

Asked for comment, the clearly exasperated Steele went off on a tirade.

'You know better than me trying to parse this bubblegum speak coming out of the mouths of these people," Steele began. "It's just banal attempts to sort of placate. It's frustrating because, do you want to be president?"

His voice rising, he continued, "Well you have to go through the guy sitting at 52 percent right now among the Republican base. Otherwise, get out of the race! Stop wasting our time! You know, if you're not going to take him on, then why are you in the game?"

Continuing in that vein he added, "Are you waiting for the justice system which you demonize and belittle and berate to do the thing you won't do? I mean, which do you want? You can't have it both ways. And the justice system is not going to deliver Donald Trump on your political platter -- it's just not going to work that way."

"The reality of it is, you either want the job or you don't. If you do, that means you're going to have to sound a lot more like [Ex-New Jersey Governor] Chris Christie than the way you're sounding right now," he explained.

Watch at this link.

MSNBC 07 24 2023 13 02 56 youtu.be

Nikki Haley calls for ‘generational change’ – then declares she would support a second Trump term

Former Trump UN Ambassador Nikki Haley, who is running against her former boss for the Republican nomination for president, insisted America needs "generational change" while stating emphatically she would support Donald Trump as President for a second term.

Haley also continued to again suggest, baselessly, that President Joe Biden will die in office if elected again.

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DeSantis isn’t the only presidential contender traveling the country while doing a government job

An organization critical of Gov. Ron DeSantis is complaining that the presidential contender spent 60% of his time out of state last month, and maintained a similar schedule thus far in July.

DeSantis Watch, produced by DW PAC, which began as a joint project of Florida Watch & Progress Florida, argued that the governor has been leaving major problems including rising housing costs and property insurance unaffordabilty and unavailability to fester.

The organization relies on news reports about the governor’s movements, communications director Anders Croy said, and placed the governor in New York on Thursday and North Carolina and Utah on Friday. Earlier, on Tuesday, DeSantis was in South Carolina announcing plans to undo much of the Biden administration’s military policy, including diversity initiatives and support for transgender troops. He also sat for an interview with CNN’s Jake Tapper.

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