2024 campaign news: GOP debate and Trump's final sprint to Iowa caucuses

January 11 - 2024 campaign updates and highlights from GOP debate

By Aditi Sangal, Elise Hammond, Maureen Chowdhury, Tori B. Powell and Shania Shelton, CNN

Updated 0030 GMT (0830 HKT) January 12, 2024
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7:02 p.m. ET, January 11, 2024

Analysis: The 2024 primary campaigns have already changed the Republican Party

From CNN's Zachary B. Wolf

The ultimate winner of the Republican presidential primary is TBD, but the primary campaign has already had an effect on the direction of the party, which continues to reckon with former President Donald Trump’s populism.

The GOP’s major candidates have crystalized on certain key issues (deporting millions of migrants) and fractured on others (reforming Social Security and Medicare).

These tectonic policy movements were on display Wednesday night at CNN’s primary debate in Iowa featuring former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and at a Fox News town hall featuring debate no-show Trump.

In favor of mass deportation: The view held by the major GOP presidential candidates that millions of undocumented immigrants currently in the US must be deported represents a striking shift for the party.

A surge of migrants and asylum-seekers crossing the US border in recent years has been a motivating issue for Republicans concerned about border security. Trump, who built his first presidential campaign on promises to build a wall on the southern border, has long expressed admiration for a 1950s mass-deportation effort.

CNN reported in November about his plans, if reelected, to amp up his immigration hard line with the building of large camps to house migrants waiting for deportation and tapping federal and local law enforcement to assist with large-scale arrests of undocumented immigrants across the country.

While Haley and DeSantis did not weigh in specifically on those ideas Wednesday night, they were asked by debate moderator Jake Tapper about the estimated more than 10 million undocumented immigrants already living in the US.

“The number of people that will be amnestied when I’m president is zero,” DeSantis said, when asked if he would allow any of the 10 million to stay in the US.

“You have to deport them,” said Haley. “And the reason you have to deport them is they’re cutting the line.”

Read more about how the GOP has changed during the primary campaigns.

A version of this story appeared in CNN’s What Matters newsletter. To get it in your inbox, sign up for free here.

6:57 p.m. ET, January 11, 2024

With just days until the Iowa caucuses, Trump brought the campaign trail to a New York courthouse on Thursday

From CNN's Jeremy Herb, Lauren del Valle and Kara Scannell

Donald Trump brought the campaign trail to the courthouse during closing arguments of his $370 million New York civil fraud trial on Thursday, delivering campaign speeches both inside and outside the courtroom to attack the case against him and the attorney general who brought it.

Trump’s decision to launch into a monologue at the conclusion of his lawyers’ closing arguments reflected the fact that the civil fraud trial is a serious threat to Trump’s business and brand – New York Attorney General Letitia James is seeking to bar Trump from doing business in the state – as well as how Trump is eager to take advantage of the situation as he runs for president.

Judge Arthur Engoron has already found Trump is liable for fraud in the civil case, and he plans to issue a full decision by the end of the month.

The former president effectively delivered the same speech in multiple locations on Thursday: The cameras outside the courtroom, to Engoron inside court and at his 40 Wall Street property in the afternoon to reporters. Notably, the most important time he gave his speech was where there were no cameras: Inside the courtroom.

“This was a political witch hunt,” Trump said while speaking to Engoron in an unscheduled moment in court. “What’s happened here, sir, is a fraud on me.”

Just before breaking for lunch at about 12:55 p.m. ET, Trump attorney Chris Kise renewed his request to Engoron to give Trump “two-to-three minutes” to make his case directly to the judge. Engoron addressed Trump, asking if he would promise just to comment on the facts in the case.

“I think this case goes outside just the facts,” Trump responded, taking the opening to launch into a five-minute speech from the defense table. Engoron sat back for several minutes, letting Trump go on, before interrupting him to tell him his time was running short.

Trump’s closing argument speech mimicked his testimony when the attorney general called him as a witness, where Engoron tried and eventually gave up trying to get Trump to answer questions directly and not give political speeches.

Here are other key takeaways from Thursday's oral arguments.

5:39 p.m. ET, January 11, 2024

Analysis: Why Haley and Trump may be tied in New Hampshire polls

From CNN's Harry Enten

Former President Donald Trump and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley.
Former President Donald Trump and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley. Getty Images, CNN

Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie polled poorly pretty much everywhere in his now suspended bid for the GOP nomination. The exception to that was New Hampshire. 

Christie leaving the race changes what was already a tight race in the Granite State into one that is way too close to call. 

Our CNN poll conducted by the University of New Hampshire had Donald Trump at 39% to Nikki Haley’s 32%. Christie was back in third place at 12%. 

The poll also asked about who voters wanted as their second choice. The vast majority of Christie backers, 65%, said Haley. Less than 1% chose Trump. 

So what happens when you look at the horserace but reallocate Christie supporters to their second choice? It’s Trump at 40% to Haley at 40%. In other words, the race is a tie by any definition.

Of course, a Trump loss in New Hampshire may not mean that much because he looks significantly stronger elsewhere. As previously noted, New Hampshire is one of the best places to beat Trump given how moderate and wealthy the state is.

Still, the fact that Haley and Trump are even anywhere would be almost inconceivable for much of the 2024 campaign.

5:36 p.m. ET, January 11, 2024

DeSantis calls Haley's attack on campaign dysfunction "offensive" as he touts managerial record as governor

From CNN's Aaron Pellish and Kit Maher from Rock Rapids, Iowa

Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis participate in a CNN Republican Presidential Debate at Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa, on January 10.
Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis participate in a CNN Republican Presidential Debate at Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa, on January 10. Will Lanzoni/CNN

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis reacted to former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley’s sharp critiques of the drama and tumult behind the scenes of his presidential bid, which she argued indicates his ineffectiveness as a leader.

DeSantis told CNN following a campaign event in Rock Rapids, Iowa, on Thursday he thinks a better indication of his managerial capacity is his tenure at the head of Florida’s government, rather than his presidential campaign, after Haley issued a scathing rebuke of the leadership changes, personal clashes and financial largess behind the DeSantis campaign and a pro-DeSantis super PAC.

“That to me would be the best indication of your management and leadership skills,” DeSantis said of his record as governor. “Not a PAC that I am legally prohibited from managing or interfering with. I mean, they can do events for me, I can show up but I have no involvement in how they're spending or leadership or any of that.”

DeSantis spoke to reporters in Rock Rapids following a town hall organized by Never Back Down, a super-PAC backing DeSantis that has seen changes in multiple leadership positions throughout the campaign. The Florida governor told CNN Haley’s attack reflects the strength of his record as governor.

“If that's the best you can do, honestly, I think that that shows that I must have done a pretty good job as governor,” he said. 

DeSantis also criticized Haley for invoking the chaos in his campaign in response to his answer to a question on education policies and school choice programs.

“I thought it was offensive to try to equate, you know, super PACs with things that actually impact people's lives,” he told CNN. “The voters here care about education. They don’t care about the minutia of all the political back and forth.”

In a post-debate interview with Anderson Cooper, DeSantis said Haley was “citing an organization that's an outside group that I don’t even control,” referring to Never Back Down. The super PAC has played a critical role in DeSantis’ ground game in Iowa and he often appears at events as a “special guest,” including today. 

“People don't care about process stuff. They care about the substance and they care about the leadership,” DeSantis told Anderson on Wednesday.  

When asked about turnover within his campaign, DeSantis said it was on “the PAC side.”  

Over the summer, more than a third of the campaign staff was cut and the campaign manager was replaced. More recently, Never Back Down parted ways with three senior officials on the heels of departures from chairman Adam Laxalt and chief executive Chris Jankowski. 

4:34 p.m. ET, January 11, 2024

How an Arctic chill could affect the Iowa caucuses

From CNN's Stephen Collinson in Ankeny, Iowa

A pedestrian navigates a snow-covered sidewalk on January 9, in Iowa City, Iowa.
A pedestrian navigates a snow-covered sidewalk on January 9, in Iowa City, Iowa. Scott Olson/Getty Images

For Iowans, extreme weather is a fact of life.

Summers bring oppressive heat and tornadoes while perishing cold and blizzards make winter feel like it lasts forever. But on election night Monday, the weather will be brutal even by Iowa standards, with a fierce Arctic snap forecast to send temperatures plunging.

Since Iowa uses a caucus system that requires voters to leave their toasty homes in the evening and gather in community centers, firehouses, bars, school gymnasiums and public libraries to choose their candidates, this could be a problem. 

Campaign workers who collect names and addresses at every political event, may need to go door knocking to coax their voters outside. This could boost a candidate like Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis who invested heavily in a statewide ground game. But former President Donald Trump has also built a get-out-the-vote machine, unlike in the 2016 caucuses when he and his team barely had a clue how it all worked. Until recently, Nikki Haley was lagging in this area – but her endorsement by the powerful America for Prosperity Action group gave her access to a huge political network that could keep her viable in the state.

Haley, who is from balmy South Carolina, confessed Thursday at an event in a Des Moines suburb that she was struggling to comprehend the cold, and that her two adult kids who are traveling with her had never seen so much snow. 

“On the 15th, on Monday, it’s going to be so cold, I don’t even know what negative 15 is!,” she said, referring to forecast Fahrenheit temperatures – which would make it the coldest caucus night in history, especially if windchills reach the predicted — 40 degrees mark.

A snowstorm this week already disrupted the run-in to the caucuses, forcing candidates to cancel events as a winter storm barreled across the prairies. A car carrying Vivek Ramaswamy, the long-shot GOP candidate, ended up in a ditch. 

The Iowa campaign might have to take another snow day on Friday, with a fresh monster storm expected to dump up to 10 inches of snow. This will make it tough for candidates to barnstorm the state and force supporters to brave snowbound roads to see them.

A suspension may play into Trump’s hands, since Haley and DeSantis – who ironically comes from the Sunshine state – Florida – need to use every remaining hour to try to cut his wide lead in the polls.

4:00 p.m. ET, January 11, 2024

Ramaswamy urges Supreme Court to overturn Colorado ruling removing Trump from ballot 

From CNN’s Devan Cole

Former President Donald Trump and Vivek Ramaswamy.
Former President Donald Trump and Vivek Ramaswamy. Getty Images

Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy is urging the US Supreme Court to overturn the Colorado Supreme Court ruling barring Donald Trump from the state’s ballot. 

Ramaswamy, who has previously denounced the Colorado court ruling, told the justices, in a friend-of-the-court brief, that he disagreed with the state court’s finding that the Constitution’s so-called insurrectionist ban applies to the presidency. 

But he also stressed that if the justices in Washington, DC, leave the Colorado ruling intact, the consequences “will extend far beyond the dispute over President Trump’s eligibility,” potentially incentivizing voters and decision-makers in states to find ways to kick candidates off the ballot for their own personal and professional benefit. 

“For secretaries of state and state supreme court justices, the path to national notoriety will be illuminated: To enhance your credibility among co-partisans, simply concoct a reason to declare a disfavored presidential candidate of the opposing party ineligible to run for office,” he wrote in the brief. 

“For voters, the message will be equally clear: Scour the records of disfavored candidates for speeches containing martial rhetoric, or even policies that had unintended consequences, and then file challenges under Section 3. The number of Section 3 complaints will proliferate, as will the number of divergent outcomes,” the filing said, referring to the Constitutional provision at issue in the case.

After the Colorado Supreme Court issued its ruling last month, Ramaswamy pledged to withdraw from the Colorado GOP primary unless Trump is allowed on the ballot. 

The Colorado decision has been on pause pending the US Supreme Court’s resolution of the case, and the state’s top election official last week certified the 2024 presidential primary ballots with Trump’s name on the Republican ballot. 

Ramaswamy joins fellows candidates in criticizing the Colorado Supreme Court ruling.

The US Supreme Court is set to hear oral arguments in the case on February 8.  

5:45 p.m. ET, January 11, 2024

Analysis: Why placing 2nd in the Iowa caucuses is important

From CNN's Harry Enten

Former President Donald Trump is undeniably the frontrunner in Iowa’s Republican caucuses. While we have not had a single poll conducted and released publicly in January, the ones from December put Trump in the strongest position of any Republican at that point before the caucuses.

This might leave you asking why we should care about either Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis or former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley given they were both more than 30 points behind Trump in those same polls.

The pair will face off in a CNN debate on Wednesday night, their final chance for a breakout performance ahead of next week’s contest. Trump, for his part, declined again to debate his opponents and will instead do a Fox News town hall.

Here's why DeSantis and Haley are vying for second place in the Hawkeye state:

Iowa results do a fairly lousy job of predicting what happens in the New Hampshire primary, but Iowa could help winnow the field as well as provide a momentum driven boost heading into New Hampshire.

Let’s start with what is obvious at this point: DeSantis is not doing well in New Hampshire. The latest CNN poll conducted by the University of New Hampshire has DeSantis down to fifth place with a mere 5% of the voter support.

It’s tough to imagine DeSantis having any real shot at the Republican presidential nomination if he came in third in Iowa and came in third or worse in New Hampshire. DeSantis’ campaign has to know that.

History is littered with southern conservatives who bet it all on Iowa and dropped out afterward. The one that comes most immediately to my mind is Phil Gramm.

He, like DeSantis, was a fundraising machine and was seen as Bob Dole’s strongest rival for the 1996 GOP nomination. Gramm, though, finished poorly in Iowa and left the race.

If DeSantis finishes second in Iowa, he may stay in the race for a significant amount of time. The Florida governor could claim to be Trump’s strongest rival.

Haley, on the other hand, isn’t looking to merely keep her campaign afloat after Iowa. She’s looking to use it as a launching pad to the Granite State. She’s down just 7 points to Trump in CNN's latest New Hampshire poll.

The former South Carolina governor has risen from 20% in November to 32% now, while Trump is now at 39%. While Haley has a minimal chance of winning in Iowa, that doesn’t matter as much as you might think.

Read more about why placing second in Iowa is important.

1:35 p.m. ET, January 11, 2024

Iowa caucuses set to be the coldest on record, by a lot

From CNN Meteorologists Monica Garrett and Brandon Miller

A campaign worker places signs in a snow bank before a campaign event for Nikki Haley in Waukee, Iowa, on Tuesday.
A campaign worker places signs in a snow bank before a campaign event for Nikki Haley in Waukee, Iowa, on Tuesday. Carolyn Kaster/AP

Iowa voters will face their coldest caucuses ever on Monday, as a dangerous Arctic blast dives into the central US this weekend and lasts through early next week.

Monday is expected to be the coldest day in January for Iowa in at least five years, with wind chills as low as minus 40 degrees Fahrenheit.

Iowans will wake up to temperatures more than 15 degrees below zero on Monday morning.

Nearly the entire state will fail to climb above zero degrees Fahrenheit Monday afternoon, the exception being the far southeastern portion of the state that may reach a degree or two above zero.

This would be the first time since February of 2021 that the high temperature in Des Moines fails to reach zero degrees.

Add winds to this bitter cold and wind chill will reach life-threatening levels at minus 20 to minus 40 degrees Fahrenheit for the entire day. 

The forecast average daily temperature for Des Moines on Monday is minus 9.5 degrees Fahrenheit, nearly 20 degrees colder than the previous coldest caucus night on January 19, 2004 when the average temperature was 9 degrees, according to CNN analysis of NWS data for Iowa caucuses.

Iowa has held caucuses every four years since 1972 in either January or February.

Record-shattering cold caucuses will be in store for the rest of the state as well. Sioux City is forecast to average minus 10 degrees Fahrenheit on Monday, more than 20 degrees colder than the 11 degree average for the caucus in 2004. Cedar Rapids is forecast to average minus 9 degrees Fahrenheit and Davenport minus 8 degrees Fahrenheit on Monday.

Previous coldest caucuses there averaged 5.5 and 8 degrees Fahrenheit respectively on January 24, 2000.

This bitter cold snap comes after what has been a mild winter thus far in Iowa. Nearly the entire state of Iowa is seeing their warmest start to winter on record with average daily temperatures running about 10 degrees above normal since December 1, according to National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration data. 

12:46 p.m. ET, January 11, 2024

New Hampshire governor says Haley will be doing 7 to 10 events a day in the Granite State ahead of primary

From CNN's Ali Main

New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu told CNN on Thursday that GOP candidate Nikki Haley will be packing her campaign schedule in the Granite State ahead of the January 23 primary.

"Nikki didn't lay out any expectations for Iowa," he said, again downplaying the former United Nations ambassador's chances of winning the state's January 15 caucuses.

"I think as long as she works hard, she has a strong showing, I think that's great. But really, we're focused on New Hampshire," he told CNN's Kasie Hunt.

Previewing Haley's ground strategy in New Hampshire, Sununu said, "as this gets closer to election day, it isn't just a couple of town halls. I mean, you'll see her be doing seven to 10 events a day minimum" to make connections with voters.

Comparing former President Donald Trump's support in the Granite State to Haley's, he said, Trump will "get a couple thousand people every month, but Nikki will literally get five to 700 people, you know, three times a day."

Haley drew large crowds in her last New Hampshire swing, including a 700 person crowd in an at-capacity gymnasium, according to fire marshals.

Pressed again on his comment last night to CNN that he would vote for Trump even if he was a convicted felon, and whether that would be true if he was found guilty in his election subversion case, Sununu responded, "that's a massive hypothetical, right? That's a year away. It's a huge hypothetical," before deflecting.

"Don't think that he's just going to be stopped because of what happens in a court case. That is a huge fallacy," Sununu said. "A lot of folks are gonna get behind him no matter what. And that just that's just the reality of the situation. This is how bad Joe Biden is," he added.

Sununu said he hasn't talked to Chris Christie in "a few weeks," but that they had "exchanged some messages" around the time he endorsed Haley.

Christie suspended his campaign Wednesday.