2024 campaign news: Trump and GOP candidates campaign ahead of New Hampshire primary | CNN Politics

January 21 - 2024 campaign updates

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DeSantis ends 2024 presidential campaign. Watch the moment
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Haley touts a two-person race in New Hampshire as she battles with Trump for GOP nomination

Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley greets supporters at a campaign event in Exeter, New Hampshire, on Sunday.

Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley on Sunday night touted a two-person race as she battles with former President Donald Trump for the GOP nomination after Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis ended his campaign.

During her rally in Exeter, New Hampshire, Haley greeted the crowd by boasting about the state of the race with only two days until the first-in-the-nation primary. 

“Can you hear that sound? That’s the sound of a two-person race,” the former South Carolina governor said as the crowd cheered.  

Haley was joined by Judy Sheindlin, star of “Judge Judy,” who gave her pitch to Granite State voters as to why they should back Haley.

“For me, finding the person that we can be proud of … is probably the most important decision that all of us are going to have to make in our current history. Nikki Haley has to be that candidate,” Judge Judy said. 

New Hampshire Republican Gov. Chris Sununu also attended, saying he’s “tired of losing … and I’m sure as hell tired of Donald Trump.”

“If you will join with us on Tuesday, if you will bring five friends with you to the polls, I will spend every day proving to you that you made a good decision,” Haley said.

Trump touts endorsements from former GOP rivals: “They're all coming with us”

Former President Donald Trump on Sunday touted the recent endorsements he has received from one-time GOP 2024 rivals, including Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, and flexed his lead in the polls over former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley ahead of the New Hampshire primary Tuesday. 

“Vivek just came with us and now Ron just came with us, they’re all coming with us,” Trump said, referring to Vivek Ramaswamy and DeSantis, at a campaign event in Rochester, New Hampshire.

Trump also touted the endorsement he received from South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, noting Haley appointed Scott to his Senate seat when she was the state’s governor. In the final days ahead of the New Hampshire primary, Trump has sought to highlight support he has in Haley’s home state of South Carolina, where she was twice elected governor. 

The former president also spoke about his upcoming court appearance in his civil defamation case Monday in New York before he flies to New Hampshire for a campaign rally on the eve of the primary.

“Tomorrow … I do the court thing, then I come back and I make a speech tomorrow night and hopefully that should wrap it up because we are so far ahead, it’s incredible,” Trump said. 

Trump congratulates DeSantis and says he “ran a really good campaign”

Former President Donald Trump speaks at a campaign event in Rochester, New Hampshire, on Sunday.

Former President Donald Trump on Sunday congratulated Ron DeSantis for running what he described as “a really good campaign,” hours after the Florida governor announced he was ending his presidential campaign and backing Trump.

It was the first time in months Trump used DeSantis’ real name as opposed to the nickname he had been using, Ron DeSanctimonious, as he attacked him.

“He was very gracious and he endorsed me, so I appreciated that. I appreciate that and I also look forward to working with Ron and everybody else to defeat Crooked Joe Biden,” Trump said.

Some more context: Trump viciously attacked DeSantis throughout his White House bid, focusing the majority of his attacks on the governor before the Iowa caucuses. Many of those attacks stemmed from Trump’s personal animosity toward DeSantis for being “disloyal” by running against him after Trump had endorsed DeSantis for governor in 2017, according to multiple Trump campaign advisers and people close to the former president.

Trump fundraises off DeSantis' endorsement

Just hours after Ron DeSantis ended his presidential campaign and endorsed Donald Trump, the former president’s campaign on Sunday sent a fundraising text to supporters to raise money off the Florida governor’s support. 

“Ron DeSantis endorses ME! It was a hard-fought race, but now it’s time for us TO UNITE AS A PARTY AND DEFEAT JOE BIDEN!” the fundraising appeal read. 

The message also called on voters to help wrap up the Republican primary early by donating to Trump’s campaign.

“The New Hampshire primary is ON TUESDAY. If we’re going to wrap up the primaries, it will be all because of what you do right here, right now,” it said.

Biden ally tells New Hampshire progressives to write in the president's name: "You don't have to agree 100%"

President Joe Biden delivers remarks at Mother Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, South Carolina, on January 8.

Democratic Rep. Ro Khanna told progressives to vote for the President Joe Biden even if they don’t fully agree with him, becoming is the latest surrogate to join the grassroots effort in New Hampshire to write in Biden’s name on the Democratic primary ballot Tuesday.

The California lawmaker, who appeared at multiple events this weekend, said a win in New Hampshire would set the course for the president’s reelection campaign. Khanna repeated the mantra many involved in the effort have adopted when asked how well the president needs to perform as a write-in candidate: “A win is a win.”

Khanna said though he is more politically progressive than Biden, “you can be more progressive and support this president for what he has achieved and what he’s going to achieve, in contrast to the alternative, which is gonna be Donald Trump.”

He told young voters and progressives, groups where the president’s approval rating has been suffering, that “you don’t have to agree 100%.”

Read more about the write-in effort here.

DeSantis supporters gather at restaurant where he was set to appear

Inside the Farm Bar & Grille in Manchester, New Hampshire, where Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis was set to appear Sunday night — before he dropped out of the race —supporters, state representatives and some campaign staff gathered in a private room. 

“People feel like they gave it their all,” Michael Gorecki, the DeSantis campaign’s New Hampshire state director, told CNN. “While there’s disappointment, there’s great hope for the future.” 

One DeSantis supporter at the restaurant said she was surprised when he dropped out of the race. 

“Well, I was surprised like everybody else,” Jeanine Notter told CNN. “I was under the impression that he was going to stay in it until Super Tuesday.” 

Notter, who had a “DeSantis for President” sign tucked under her arm, said she would now be voting for former President Donald Trump in New Hampshire’s Republican primary.

“President Trump is so far ahead of everybody else, I think he realized, that’s what he said, that there was no path to victory,” Notter said, adding she hopes DeSantis runs in four years.

At the restaurant, people were drinking beers around tables and chatting with one another as the Tampa v. Detroit football game played. Pizza, chicken tenders and other small plates were passed out. The gathering is open to supporters and anyone who RSVP’d to the event but closed to press. 

DeSantis drops out of the race while his rivals make a final push before New Hampshire. Here's what to know

The race for the Republican presidential nomination is down to two major candidates. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis announced he is ending his campaign Sunday, nearly a week after his underwhelming performance in Iowa.

In a video on X, DeSantis said there was no clear path to presidential success for his campaign and endorsed former President Donald Trump.

The announcement comes just days before Tuesday’s first-in-the-nation primary in New Hampshire, where former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley hopes to close the gap with Trump.

Here’s what to know:

  • DeSantis endorses Trump: DeSantis endorsed the former president, despite attacking him throughout his White House bid, saying, “Trump is superior to the current incumbent, Joe Biden. That is clear.” Trump and his team had been preparing for DeSantis to drop out over the past 24 hours, according to a senior adviser. Still, DeSantis did not give the former president’s team a heads-up before the endorsement. Trump said he is “very honored” to have received DeSantis’ support, but it’s unclear whether Trump will embrace the governor moving forward, one adviser said.
  • Lack of financial support: Conversations about dropping out started Thursday in Florida, according to a source. DeSantis met with a small group of his closest advisers and ultimately “determined it’s in his best interest to get back to governing,” the source said. DeSantis called donors and told them there was no reason to waste time and money staying in a race with Trump. Additionally, one top DeSantis donor told CNN, “The money wasn’t there to continue.”
  • Still trading attacks: Though he is no longer in the race, DeSantis and Haley are continuing to jab at each other. In his video announcing the end of his campaign, DeSantis said he was endorsing Trump, “because we can’t go back to the old Republican guard of yesteryear or a repackaged form of warmed-over corporatism that Nikki Haley represents.” Responding to that comment, Haley told CNN’s Dana Bash, “It’s interesting because there’s no proof to that.”
  • The numbers:CNN poll released earlier Sunday found Trump with 50% support among likely Republican primary voters in New Hampshire, while Haley stood at 39%. DeSantis stood at just 6% in the poll, below the 10% minimum support he would need to win delegates there per the Republican Party’s rules.

Other headlines from the campaign trail:

  • Biden focuses on abortion rights: President Joe Biden’s campaign is launching a full-court press this week to put abortion rights front and center in the 2024 race. It will air its first abortion-focused ad of the year in battleground states.
  • But Biden won’t be on the ballot in New Hampshire: Democrats in the Granite State are criticizing the Democratic National Committee’s decision to make South Carolina the party’s first primary contest. New Hampshire Democratic Sen. Maggie Hassan said it was a “terrible decision,” but she still expects Biden to do well. Biden did not file to be a candidate because the primary violates the DNC’s new rules. Supporters have mounted a write-in effort on his behalf.
  • Trump’s attacks on Haley’s name: Trump defended his mocking of Haley’s given name, telling Fox News that it’s “a little bit of a takeoff on her name … wherever she may come from.” Trump first referred to Haley’s first name by misspelling it as “Nimrada” in a post on Truth Social last week and later referred to her as “Nimbra,” in the latest examples of him using racist dog whistles to attack his opponents.
  • Haley looks for momentum: The New Hampshire Union Leader’s editorial board endorsed Haley on Sunday, days before the state’s primary election. New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu said he believes Haley can win the state, but reiterated that she doesn’t “have to win” in order to gain momentum heading into future primary contests.

DeSantis supporters' second choices could slightly widen Trump margin in New Hampshire, per CNN/UNH poll

Former President Donald Trump and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley.

When Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ supporters in the latest CNN New Hampshire poll conducted by the University of New Hampshire are reallocated to their second choice candidate, former President Donald Trump’s double-digit lead over former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley among likely Republican primary voters widens slightly.

Trump’s support ticks up from 50% to 54%, while Haley shifts from 39% to 41%. Another 3% of likely GOP primary voters say they’d vote for someone else.

The poll asked voters who they would support if their top choice was no longer in the race. DeSantis suspended his campaign Sunday, a few hours after the poll’s findings were first released.

The Florida governor was the first choice of 6% of likely New Hampshire GOP primary voters, and his supporters generally tilted toward Trump over Haley in their second choices. The survey was fielded from January 16 through January 19.

Shifting DeSantis backers to their second choices doesn’t materially change the dynamics of the race, and if anything, pushes Trump and Haley’s opposing coalitions a bit further apart.

Among registered Republicans, for example, Trump’s support ticks to 72% from 67%, while Haley’s backing among those who are registered as undeclared stands at 60% instead of 58%. And Trump’s support among the state’s conservative likely GOP primary voters climbs to 77% from 71%, while Haley holds 72% among moderate likely Republican primary voters, similar to her level of support initially.

The CNN poll conducted by UNH was conducted online among 2,348 New Hampshire adults drawn from a probability-based panel. The 1,210 likely Republican primary voters were identified through survey questions about their intention to vote. Results for that group have an error margin of plus or minus 2.8 percentage points.

"Churchill" quote DeSantis used in dropout announcement is likely misattributed

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis announces he is dropping out of the presidential race in a video posted to X on January 21.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on Sunday dropped out of the 2024 presidential race. In a video announcing his exit, he quoted Winston Churchill. Or did he?

In a video posted to X, DeSantis said, “Winston Churchill once remarked that ‘success is not final, failure is not fatal. It is the courage to continue that counts.’ While this campaign has ended, the mission continues down here in Florida. We will continue to show the country how to lead.”

The International Churchill Society, which dubs itself “the world’s preeminent member organisation dedicated to preserving the historic legacy of Sir Winston Churchill,” maintains a list of quotes falsely attributed to the legendary World War II British prime minister.

The society’s website says that it can find no attribution for the “success is not final” quote, nor for a related statement sometimes attributed to Churchill: “Success is going from failure to failure without losing your enthusiasm.”

According to the International Churchill Society, those lines “are found nowhere in his canon.”

“An almost equal number of sources found online credit these sayings to Abraham Lincoln — but we have found none that provides any attribution in the Lincoln Archives,” it adds.

Haley pitches herself to DeSantis voters who "don't want to lose"

Following Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ exit from the GOP presidential primary, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley said she hopes to bring in some of DeSantis’ supporters by pitching herself as the most electable candidate, arguing voters backed DeSantis in part because “they don’t want to lose.”  

“I think that they love America, and I think they want a new generational leader,” Haley told CNN’s Dana Bash after a campaign stop in Seabrook, New Hampshire.

“Look at the fact that we could actually win, and I think that’s what Ron DeSantis’ supporters want. They don’t want to lose,” she added. 

Haley said she plans to stay in the race through Tuesday’s New Hampshire primary and next month’s primary in her home state of South Carolina.

Haley said she sees President Joe Biden as equally unfit for the presidency as former President Donald Trump, leaning into her pitch for a new generation of leadership by arguing “if either one of them was good, I wouldn’t be running.” 

Trump says he is "very honored" by DeSantis endorsement

Former President Donald Trump said Sunday he is “very honored” to have the endorsement of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis after he announced he is suspending his presidential campaign. 

Trump and his campaign team had been preparing for DeSantis to drop out of the race over the past 24 hours, according to a senior adviser. Still, DeSantis did not give the former president’s team a heads-up before the endorsement.

Biden's campaign had long looked past DeSantis as they eagerly await a one-on-one contest

President Joe Biden speaks at an event in Raleigh, North Carolina, on January 18.

President Joe Biden’s campaign had, at one point, binders of research on all Republican candidates, including Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. And they had taken opportunities earlier in the race to lambast the governor’s record on education and “anti-woke” policies in Florida.

But it had long become clear to Biden’s advisers that DeSantis was unlikely to become the Republican nominee, and they have increasingly turned their attention to Donald Trump as their likeliest rival in November, with less attention paid to other contenders.

While the Biden campaign responds in near-real time to Trump at his rallies and his media appearances on Twitter, they have mostly ignored DeSantis for a while.

This Biden campaign is eager for the race to become a one-on-one choice — fulfilling Biden’s long-stated entreaty to voters to not “compare me to the almighty, compare me to the alternative.”

The campaign has been grappling with the research showing many undecided voters still don’t believe Trump will emerge as the nominee. Until those voters begin paying more attention, Biden advisers believe it will be difficult to convince people of the stakes of the election.

DeSantis came to decision on his own, but conversations about dropping out started Thursday in Florida

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ short trip back to Florida on Thursday was a resetting moment for him where, for the first time, he seriously entertained conversations about dropping out, according to a source with knowledge of the matter. 

DeSantis met with a very small group of his closest advisers, collected his thoughts, and ultimately “determined it’s in his best interest to get back to governing,” the source said. They described the mood around DeSantis’ advisers as “disappointing, but the belief had set in” that his campaign was over.

DeSantis called top donors personally Sunday and told them that he woke up in the morning and decided there was no path to winning and it was time to get out, two Republican donors with knowledge of the calls told CNN. 

DeSantis told the donors there was no reason to waste his time and money staying in a race with former President Donald Trump, recalling how he kept hearing from attendees at his events that, “If it wasn’t for Trump, I would vote for you.”

The two sources said DeSantis knows he is young — and if he is to have a chance at winning the GOP presidential nomination in 2028, he needed to endorse Trump.

CNN’s Steve Contorno reports:

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Haley says DeSantis ran a "great race," her campaign says his exit will have little effect on her chances

Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley holds up two fingers as she speaks in Seabrook, New Hampshire, on January 21. Haley addressed the news of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis dropping out of the presidential race, gesturing to indicate that it is now a two-person race.

Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley, reacting to Ron DeSantis ending his presidential campaign Sunday, said the Florida governor “ran a great race,” while her campaign said his exit will mean little for Haley’s chances in the election.

She added, “This comes down to: What do you want? Do you want more of the same or do you want something new?”

Haley’s campaign says it does not think DeSantis dropping out means much for Haley because they believe that DeSantis supporters are likely to split evenly for Donald Trump and Haley. They also point to how low DeSantis is polling, meaning that any support he has isn’t hugely significant.

Campaign officials say this means there is truly only one other option now for voters who don’t want Trump or President Joe Biden. 

Trump team didn't know DeSantis was going to endorse him

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and his team did not give former President Donald Trump or his senior advisers a heads up that DeSantis was going to endorse Trump, two sources familiar with the matter told CNN. 

Earlier Sunday, one of Trump’s senior advisers was asked by reporters about a potential endorsement from DeSantis. “That would be news to me,” the adviser quipped. 

Trump's team had been preparing for DeSantis to end his campaign

Former President Donald Trump attends a campaign event in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, on January 17.

Former President Donald Trump and his campaign team had been preparing for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis to drop out of the race over the past 24 hours.

Trump is expected to release a statement on social media addressing the suspension of DeSantis’ campaign, two sources familiar with the discussions told CNN.

“The rumors were hot and heavy throughout the weekend, so we had expected this,” a senior Trump campaign adviser told CNN shortly after DeSantis announced he was dropping out of the race.

Trump viciously attacked DeSantis throughout his White House bid, focusing the majority of his attacks on the governor in the lead up to the Iowa caucuses. Many of those attacks stemmed from Trump’s personal animosity toward DeSantis for being “disloyal” by running against him after Trump had endorsed DeSantis for governor in 2017, according to multiple Trump campaign advisers and people close to the former president.

A big question now is whether Trump can look beyond his personal grievances and view DeSantis as a potential surrogate, Trump’s allies and advisers said.

“It’s always been personal with Trump,” a person close to Trump told CNN, noting that the former president and his team didn’t just want to hurt DeSantis’s presidential candidacy, but also his political future beyond 2024.

Immediately after DeSantis suspended his campaign, a Trump adviser maintained that despite DeSantis’s endorsement of Trump, it’s still unclear whether the former president may ultimately embrace the Florida governor moving forward.

DeSantis lacked financial support to keep campaign alive, donor says

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks during a campaign visit in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, on January 20.

The decision by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis to end his presidential campaign came after days of conversations with donors and as his campaign and a trio of allied super PACs spent tens of millions of dollars organizing and advertising for his bid. 

DeSantis and his wife, Casey, made the decision Sunday afternoon, surprising many of his rank-and-file staffers and supporters. 

“The money wasn’t there to continue,” one top DeSantis donor told CNN. 

According to AdImpact data, through Sunday, the DeSantis campaign and three super PACs formed to support him – Never Back Down, Fight Right and Good Fight – had spent more than $60 million on pro-DeSantis advertising. 

Never Back Down, the first super PAC formed to support DeSantis’ White House bid, had faced criticism of its resource management, and went through significant staff turmoil. 

That’s despite the fact that the super PAC initially received more than $80 million that DeSantis had amassed during his time as governor of Florida, a massive stockpile of funds that allowed the group to hit the ground running with lavish TV ads, a large staff and even to provide some campaign infrastructure. 

Including that haul, Federal Election Commission records show that Never Back Down raised $130 million during the first half of 2023, and entered July of last year with nearly $100 million in cash on hand. 

Meanwhile, the DeSantis campaign itself had raised more than $31 million through midyear, per FEC records, but a portion of those funds were available for use only in the general election. And the campaign entered the fourth quarter of last year facing a real cash crunch, with only $5 million in cash on hand for use in the presidential primary as of September 30. The campaign had not yet announced how much it raised in the fourth quarter of last year. 

DeSantis endorses Trump after dropping out of 2024 race

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis endorsed former President Donald Trump in the video ending his campaign.

“I’m proud to have delivered on 100% of my promises and I will not stop now. It’s clear to me that a majority of Republican primary voters want to give Donald Trump another chance. … While I’ve had disagreements with Donald Trump, such as on the coronavirus pandemic and his elevation of Anthony Fauci, Trump is superior to the current incumbent Joe Biden. That is clear,” he said in his video on X.

“I signed a pledge to support the Republican nominee and I will honor that pledge. He has my endorsement, because we can’t go back to the old Republican guard of yesteryear or repackaged form of warmed-over corporatism that Nikki Haley represents.”

At this point there are no plans for DeSantis to appear with Trump in New Hampshire before Tuesday’s primary, according to two sources familiar. One source cautioned that could always change. 

A CNN poll released earlier Sunday found Trump with 50% support among likely Republican primary voters in the New Hampshire, while his closest competitor, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, stood at 39%. 

DeSantis stood at just 6% in the poll, below the 10% minimum support he would need to win delegates there per the Republican Party’s rules.

DeSantis drops out of presidential race

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis holds a town hall in Hampton, New Hampshire, on January 17.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who entered the Republican presidential primary as Donald Trump’s greatest threat, announced Sunday he is ending his White House bid nearly a week after his underwhelming performance in Iowa.

In a video on X, DeSantis said there was no clear path to presidential success for his campaign.

“If there was anything I could do to produce a favorable outcome, more campaign stops, more interviews, I would do it, but I can’t ask our supporters to volunteer their time and donate their resources if we don’t have a clear path to victory. Accordingly, I am today suspending my campaign,” DeSantis said.

“Winston Churchill once remarked that success is not final, failure is not fatal. It is the courage to continue that counts. While this campaign has ended, the mission continues down here in Florida. We will continue to show the country, how to lead. Thank you and God bless.”

It’s a devastating blow to the promising career of a once-rising GOP star, and his failure to reach the lofty expectation of his candidacy has already sparked a wave of second-guessing from close allies and advisers. Some believe DeSantis took too long to attack Trump. Others think his team underestimated former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley.

More remain convinced that there was nothing DeSantis could have done to wrestle the party from Trump’s loyal and sizable followers.

DeSantis is in Florida tonight following his decision to suspend his campaign, according to two sources familiar with the matter.

CNN’s Jessica Dean and Kit Maher contributed to this report.

Video: Dana Bash calls it a stunning decline

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These are the participation rules for the Republican nominating contests

As we approach the New Hampshire primary, here’s a look at the participation rules for Republican nominating contests between now and the end of March.

Thirty-six states and territories will hold Republican nominating contests between New Hampshire on Tuesday and Louisiana on March 23. 

Of those, 11 are closed, meaning only registered party members can participate (although some allow party switching on the day of the contest), and 22 are either open to all voters or semi-open, meaning that Republicans and unaffiliated voters can participate.

In many states with open primaries, voters don’t formally register with a party with the state. Information for three contests isn’t currently available.

While the early states are important for building momentum, the bulk of the delegates will be awarded in March. 

By the end of Super Tuesday, on March 5, 1,205 of the Republican convention’s 2,429 delegates will have been awarded, or 99% of the 1,215 needed to win the nomination. 

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