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

January 17 - 2024 campaign updates

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Can DeSantis and Haley come back after Trump's Iowa win?
10:37 • Source: CNN
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10:37

What we covered here

  • GOP race moves to New Hampshire: Donald Trump and GOP rivals Nikki Haley and Ron DeSantis are hitting the campaign trail in the Granite State as they make their final appeals to voters with just days until the state’s 2024 primary contest — and as the former president continues to dominate the race.
  • Trump rivals look for a boost: After Trump’s landslide victory in Iowa, Haley and DeSantis are looking to build momentum as they vie to be his top alternative. Polls show Haley has trimmed Trump’s New Hampshire lead to single digits, and she’s long viewed the state as a springboard for her campaign. DeSantis, meanwhile, is moving a majority of his staff to South Carolina, reflecting his focus on the state. 
  • Trump juggles campaign and courtroom: Trump continues to toggle between the campaign trail and courtroom as his E. Jean Carroll defamation trial continues. He attended the trial Wednesday and was set to hold a rally in New Hampshire tonight.
  • Visit CNN’s voter guide to find out how to vote in the primaries in your state.

Our live coverage has ended. Read more about the 2024 campaign in the posts below.

29 Posts

Trump says "a vote for Nikki Haley" in Tuesday's primary "is a vote for Joe Biden"

Former President Donald Trump on Wednesday claimed he would be more electable than former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley in a general election in an escalation of his attacks on his GOP presidential rival as the New Hampshire primary draws closer. 

Fresh off his landslide victory in the Iowa caucuses, the former president called for the Republican Party to unify behind him to “focus all of our resources and energy and effort on defeating crooked Joe Biden.”

DeSantis outlines schedule for the next few days, including when he will be in New Hampshire

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

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis addressed his schedule ahead of the New Hampshire primary, telling reporters that he would be heading back to the Granite State most likely on Sunday, after events in South Carolina, and indicating he would be back through the primary – though nothing has been officially scheduled. 

DeSantis also acknowledged the staff cuts at the Never Back Down PAC but said he is not pulling campaign staff out of New Hampshire.

Pressed by reporters if he would be in New Hampshire the weekend before the primary, DeSantis said, “We’re looking at Sunday. We’re gonna do Friday, here. Probably Saturday, South Carolina, and then, probably Sunday back here.”

Some background: DeSantis’ half-hearted push in New Hampshire tacitly acknowledges the state is out of reach, a reality that has been apparent to many – including some of his top advisers and allies – for months. As DeSantis prioritized Iowa and tacked further to the right to appease conservatives there, he fell out of favor with New Hampshire’s more moderate New England electorate.

Trump spent most of Wednesday in a New York courtroom. Here's what happened

A courtroom sketch shows Donald Trump sitting with arms folded beside his attorney, Alina Habba in Federal Court, in New York, on Wednesday, January 17.

Donald Trump spent most of Wednesday in New York where he clashed with yet another judge overseeing one of his trials.

The exchange with Judge Lewis Kaplan was merely the latest in a string of Trump’s in-court fights during two civil trials in New York over the past several months, offering a preview of what’s to come if any of the former president’s criminal trials are held this year as he runs for president.

On the witness stand, his accuser, E. Jean Carroll, told the jury how Trump’s statements after she went public about him allegedly sexually assaulting her shattered her reputation and led to an onslaught of threatening messages. A civil jury last year found Carroll’s allegations to be credible.

“I thought I was going to get shot,” she said.

Carroll will return on the stand Thursday morning as Trump attorney Alina Habba finishes her cross-examination.

The former president is not expected to be there watching, as Trump plans to travel to Florida for his mother-in-law’s funeral, and Kaplan declined to postpone the trial in his absence at Trump’s request again on Wednesday.

Here’s what happened in the courtroom

Haley and DeSantis try to blunt Trump's momentum as former president spent much of the day in court

With the Iowa caucuses in the rearview mirror, the 2024 presidential election continued on Wednesday with GOP candidates hitting the trail in New Hampshire ahead of the state’s primary election Tuesday.

Donald Trump won Iowa by a wide margin Monday and the two other remaining GOP candidates – former Gov. Nikki Haley and Gov. Ron DeSantis – are looking to blunt some of the former president’s momentum.

Here is what happened so far today:

Trump ups his attacks on Haley: Trump went after Haley while referring to her by her first name, Nimarata, in the latest example of Trump using racist dog whistles to attack his GOP presidential rival. He misspelled Nimarata as “Nimrada” as he attacked her in a new post on his social media platform Truth Social. Those comments came after he recently amplified a post that falsely claimed Haley was ineligible to run for president because her parents were not US citizens at the time of her birth.

Haley town hall: CNN will host a GOP presidential town hall with Haley tomorrow at 9 p.m. ET from New England College in Henniker, New Hampshire, hosted by CNN’s Jake Tapper. She was set to host a rally this evening in Rochester alongside Gov. Chris Sununu, who has endorsed her. She had flown to South Carolina last night to visit her hospitalized father, who has since been released and is doing well, a source close to Haley told CNN.

DeSantis super-PAC lays off some staff: Never Back Down, the super PAC supporting DeSantis, let go of an undisclosed number of paid staff, a source with knowledge of the political operation told CNN. The layoffs include the organization’s Super Tuesday operation, some key senior staff and the team focused on Nevada, according to a source close to the group.  

DeSantis focuses on South Carolina: The DeSantis campaign is moving a majority of its staff to South Carolina, according to a senior campaign official, reflecting the campaign’s increased focus on the state. He planned to fly back to Florida Wednesday night, return to New Hampshire on Friday, and campaign in South Carolina on Saturday and Sunday.

Trump busy in court: Trump, meanwhile, was in New York attending the contentious second day of his civil defamation trial to determine how much, if any, damages the former president must pay to E. Jean Carroll for his 2019 defamatory statements about Carroll’s sexual assault allegations. He was expected to fly to New Hampshire for a rally later this evening.

The post was updated with details about Haley’s trip last night back to South Carolina.

Biden campaign says it raised more than $1.6 million in 24 hours after Trump's victory in Iowa

Former US President and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, with sons Eric (L) and Donald (R), speaks at a watch party during the 2024 Iowa Republican presidential caucuses in Des Moines, Iowa, on January 15.

The Biden campaign raised more than $1.6 million from grassroots donors in the 24 hours after former President Donald Trump won the Iowa caucuses by a wide margin, it said Wednesday.

In a video posted to X, President Joe Biden shared the campaign’s haul and said that his campaign “is nurses and teachers versus the extreme MAGA Republicans, and we need you with us.”

CNN’s Arlette Saenz reported earlier this week that the president raised more than $97 million for his campaign and the Democratic Party in the fourth fundraising quarter last year.

Stefanik set to appear with Trump in New Hampshire this week, campaign adviser says

House GOP Conference Chairwoman Elise Stefanik (R-NY) appears on "Meet the Press" in Washington, DC, on January 7.

House GOP Conference Chairwoman Elise Stefanik is slated to campaign with Donald Trump in New Hampshire later this week, a Trump campaign adviser told CNN, in an appearance that will be viewed by some in the GOP as an audition to become Trump’s running mate.

The New York Republican is just one of several speakers who is scheduled to appear on stage ahead of Trump during his event in Concord on Friday, and numerous Trump surrogates – including members of Congress – were stumping for Trump in Iowa and New Hampshire this week. But Stefanik’s presence in New Hampshire is particularly notable, as some Republican lawmakers and strategists believe she has been jockeying to become Trump’s pick for vice president after a series of moves that appear designed to please the former president.

Stefanik was the first member of Congress to endorse Trump, throwing her weight behind the former president before he even officially announced his plans and lobbying her colleagues to follow suit.

More recently, Stefanik has embraced Trump’s rhetoric about the January 6 defendants, calling them “hostages” one day after the third anniversary of the Capitol attack. Stefanik has also filed multiple ethics complaints about the judges overseeing Trump’s legal cases. And after Trump’s landslide victory in Iowa, Stefanik called on all other candidates to drop out of the race.

Read more about Stefanik’s support for Trump

DeSantis returning to New Hampshire on Friday for multiple events, sources say

Republican presidential candidate and Florida Governor, Ron DeSantis, speaks during a campaign event in Hampton, New Hampshire, on January 17.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is returning to New Hampshire on Friday for multiple events with the super PAC backing him, two sources familiar with the plans told CNN. 

As CNN previously reported, DeSantis will travel to Florida on Wednesday night. 

After New Hampshire on Friday, DeSantis is expected to campaign in South Carolina on Saturday and Sunday.

DeSantis sidesteps question from voter about Haley's criticism that he's ignoring New Hampshire

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks to supporters at Wally's bar on January 17, in Hampton, New Hampshire.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis sidestepped a question from a voter in Hampton, New Hampshire, to respond to criticism from former South Carolina Nikki Haley that he was ignoring the Granite State ahead of the primary there Tuesday.

“Nikki Haley says that you’re ignoring New Hampshire. This is my fifth event with you. Can you square that circle?”

DeSantis laughed and said, “I can’t, but you know what, Nikki Haley is also somebody that wrote in her book, that the– her inspiration for running for office was not Ronald Reagan, not Margaret Thatcher, but Hillary Clinton.”

DeSantis didn’t directly state his commitment to the state of New Hampshire, instead painting Haley as an untrustworthy politician and unreliable when it comes to delivering on conservative issues.  

While DeSantis has campaigned in New Hampshire, the energy and resources of his campaign had largely been focused on Iowa. Now that Iowa is in the rearview mirror, the campaign sent another message: South Carolina is the priority. 

Moments before DeSantis’ Hampton event started, news broke that he is leaving New Hampshire tonight, heading back to Florida and to South Carolina for events over the weekend. A majority of his staff is also moving to South Carolina. It’s unclear if he is returning to New Hampshire before the state’s primary on Tuesday.

Here's what's at stake in the New Hampshire primary — and why GOP campaigns care about it

In this 2000 photo, then-Texas Gov. George W. Bush speaks to voters in Manchester, New Hampshire.

All Republican primary candidates are vying for the 22 delegates who are at stake in Tuesday’s New Hampshire primary

While winning the New Hampshire primary is helpful, it is not critical to winning the nomination or the White House. Joe Biden, Barack Obama and George W. Bush all lost the New Hampshire primary before going on to win their first term in the general election. Donald Trump won the primary in 2016.

The Granite State continues to be an important battleground in the general election. George W. Bush just eked out a narrow victory in 2000, without which Al Gore would have won the White House. While Biden won the state with nearly 53% of the vote, it hasn’t always gone to the national winner. John Kerry won the state in 2004, and Hillary Clinton won it by less than half a percentage point in 2016.

In the 2020 general election, 46% of New Hampshire’s voters were self-described independents. 31% of the state’s voters identified as Republicans and 23% identified as Democrats. Biden won 62% of the voters who identified as independents.

Critical battleground: Republicans and Democrats have their typical area of success, but the greater Manchester and Nashua region is a critical battleground. While the cities have leaned Democratic in recent years, GOP Gov. Chris Sununu won both cities in 2020 and 2022, even as they voted Democratic in federal races. The surrounding towns are highly competitive, but recently Democrats have had more success to the west of Manchester and Nashua.

White House chief of staff called Asa Hutchinson to apologize for DNC statement

White House Chief of Staff Jeff Zients called Asa Hutchinson on Wednesday morning to apologize for a statement issued by the Democratic National Committee (DNC) after the former Arkansas governor dropped out of the 2024 presidential race following a dismal showing in Monday night’s Iowa caucuses.

The statement from the DNC’s press secretary, released after the long-shot candidate suspended his campaign, said: “This news comes as a shock to those of us who could’ve sworn he had already dropped out.” 

“President Biden has deep respect for Governor Hutchinson and admires the race that he ran,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters during Wednesday’s press briefing. “This morning, the chief of staff here, Jeff Zients, called the governor to convey this and apologized for the statement that did not that did not represent the President’s views.” 

When asked by CNN’s MJ Lee if there was anything communicated to the DNC, Jean-Pierre said she “can’t speak” to any communication with the committee. Jean-Pierre did reiterate that the president felt that the DNC statement did not “represent his views.” 

Key things to know about the GOP presidential nomination and delegates

Winning individual primaries and caucuses is just one step in the long path to winning a party’s presidential nomination.

How does the Republican Party pick a presidential candidate, in a nutshell? Both parties hold conventions in the summer where delegates technically select the nominee. The process and rules are different for each party, but the primaries are about winning enough delegates to secure the nomination. There are different kinds of nominating contests and different kinds of delegates in a calendar that stretches from January to June, so keeping track of the delegate math can get complicated.

What is a delegate? Performing well in primaries and caucuses equals delegates, and the larger goal is amassing the magic number of delegates to secure a nomination before delegate voting at the party convention.

How many delegates are there? Whoever wins the GOP nomination needs to win at least 1,215 out of 2,429 delegates awarded as part of the primary process. In years without an incumbent, like Republicans are experiencing in 2024, the winner frequently does not hit the magic number until May or even June. In 2016, in his first of three White House runs, Donald Trump hit the magic number on May 26.

But if Trump’s lead in polls holds up during early primaries, he could wrap things up much earlier.

Keep reading here about how Republicans select their nominee.

Maine judge defers decision on Trump ballot question until Supreme Court rules 

Donald Trump looks out at supporters during a campaign event at Stevens High School in Claremont, New Hampshire, in November 2023.

A Maine judge on Wednesday told state election officials to wait for the US Supreme Court to rule on Donald Trump’s eligibility for the 2024 ballot. 

Trump asked the judge to overturn a prior decision that removed him from the Maine ballot, but the judge declined to do that – and instead paused the proceedings until the Supreme Court weighs in. Practically speaking, Wednesday’s decision means that Trump’s name is still on the ballot for the Maine GOP primary on March 5, which is Super Tuesday.

Trump campaign spokesman Steven Cheung said in a statement:

The Supreme Court plans to hear oral arguments in a similar case from Colorado early next month. Maine and Colorado are so far the only states to disqualify Trump based on his role in the January 6, 2021, Capitol riot.

Under Maine law, ballot challenges are first handled by the secretary of state, and then can be appealed in state courts. A group of voters filed a challenge in December and Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows ruled that Trump was ineligible for office.

Kennebec County Superior Court Judge Michaela Murphy, who issued Wednesday’s ruling, was appointed to the state bench by a Democratic governor in 2007 and then reappointed in 2015 by then-Gov. Paul LePage, an outspoken Republican and Trump supporter.

The post was updated with a comment from the Trump campaign.

Rubio didn't give DeSantis a heads up before endorsing Trump

Sen. Marco Rubio talks with reporters after Speaker of the House Mike Johnson attended the Republican senate luncheon in the US Capitol in November 2023.

Florida Sen. Marco Rubio said he did not give his home-state governor, Ron DeSantis, a heads up before he announced his endorsement of Donald Trump before the Iowa caucuses earlier this week.

In fact, Rubio told CNN, “I haven’t talked to Gov. DeSantis in a while now… I endorsed the candidate in the race who asked for my endorsement.” And he said DeSantis “never asked” for his endorsement.

He said that he backed Trump because he said he believes the former president is a “better choice right now” and that Trump will resolve the “very big” problems in the country.

Rubio, once a critic of Trump when he ran against him in 2016, endorsed Trump for president on Sunday, one day ahead of the pivotal Iowa caucuses.

Pro-DeSantis super PAC lays off an undisclosed number of staff, including in Super Tuesday operation

Never Back Down, the super PAC supporting Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, is letting go of an undisclosed number of paid staff, a source with knowledge of the political operation told CNN. 

After building a massive ground operation to help DeSantis come in second in Iowa, some staff will move on to the next round of nominating states. Others won’t, but will receive pay through the rest of January. 

The layoffs include the organization’s Super Tuesday operation, some key senior staff and the team focused on Nevada, according to a source close to the group. The source indicated staffers were unaware the layoffs were coming. 

Another official familiar with the super PAC’s plans said the organization “is evaluating and paring down several third-party consultants, vendors, and some staff who had been focused on different efforts to ensure our core mission continues to be executed over the long haul.”

The layoffs were somewhat mixed, including people who were solely Iowa-focused and others who have been in Nevada, another official familiar tells CNN. At least 10 field staff were cut among this group, the official said.

The New York Times was first to report the layoffs. CNN previously reported on a wave of high-profile departures and turmoil within Never Back Down last month at a critical moment in the nominating calendar for DeSantis.

Colorado GOP urges Supreme Court to restore Trump on 2024 ballot

The Colorado Republican Party urged the Supreme Court on Wednesday to restore former President Donald Trump’s spot on the state’s ballot, in a closely watched 14th Amendment case.

The high court scheduled oral arguments for February 8. In the run-up to that hearing, the involved parties and a flurry of outside groups are filing legal briefs fleshing out their arguments. 

The Colorado GOP recycled some arguments that were rejected by the Colorado Supreme Court, which decided in December that Trump is disqualified because he engaged in the January 6 insurrection, and because the 14th Amendment bans insurrectionists from holding office. 

The state party also pushed the theory that the constitutional provision doesn’t apply to the presidency, and that Congress must first take action before a candidate can be disqualified. The anti-Trump challengers and the Colorado Supreme Court’s majority disagreed with these views. 

Trump’s lawyers are expected to file their own arguments to the high court by Thursday night.

DeSantis leaving New Hampshire after events Wednesday, prioritizing South Carolina

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is leaving New Hampshire Wednesday night and will head back to Florida before traveling to events in South Carolina on Saturday and Sunday, a senior campaign official confirms to CNN.

The campaign is also moving a majority of its staff to South Carolina, according to the official, reflecting the campaign’s increased focus on the state. 

DeSantis’ event in Hampton, New Hampshire, has just started, and this evening, he plans to attend an event in Derry.

CNN has reached out to the campaign to see if DeSantis will return to New Hampshire for the primary there Tuesday. 

CBS was first to report the details of DeSantis’ staff movements and schedule. 

Harris says she's "scared as heck" about a second Trump term as she vows to "earn" reelection

Vice President Kamala Harris speaks to the press outside the White House in Washington, DC, on November 8, 2023.

Vice President Kamala Harris warned Wednesday that “we should all be scared” about the possibility of a second term for President Donald Trump, vowing to “earn the re-elect” as she made a forceful argument for a second term for President Joe Biden. 

Harris acknowledged some of the campaign’s challenges in selling the administration’s accomplishments to voters as Biden faces chronically poor poll numbers, saying “we gotta earn reelection, there is no question.”

While the campaign has focused on a democracy argument, Harris shared a message that the 2024 choice is about “freedom,” repeatedly pointing to the administration’s efforts to protect women’s reproductive rights, combat gun violence, and ease student loan debt. 

Harris was also pressed on the issue of Biden’s age, and defended her running mate as she pointed to accomplishments on climate and infrastructure. 

“I spend a lot of time with our president, being in the Oval Office, the Situation Room. We have a president in Joe Biden who is forward thinking in a way that we’ve not seen in a long time,” she said. 

All eyes are now on New Hampshire. These are the upcoming 2024 presidential primary dates to watch for

A Donald Trump supporter rallies the crowd ahead of the former President's speech at a campaign rally in Atkinson, New Hampshire, on Tuesday.

The Republican presidential candidates are all vying to take on President Joe Biden in November 2024. But first, they’re competing in the GOP primaries and caucuses, which begin in January, to emerge as the party’s nominee.

The first event of the Republican primary calendar —the Iowa caucuses — took place Monday. Next up, is the New Hampshire primary.

Here’s a look at upcoming key primary dates:

January:

  • January 23: New Hampshire presidential primary election

February:

  • February 3: South Carolina Democratic presidential primary election
  • February 6: Nevada Democratic presidential primary election
  • February 8: Nevada Republican presidential caucuses and Virgin Island Republican presidential caucuses
  • February 24: South Carolina Republican presidential primary election
  • February 27: Michigan Democratic presidential primary election

March:

  • March 2: Idaho Republican caucuses and Missouri Republican caucuses
  • March 3: Washington, DC, Republican presidential primary
  • March 4: North Dakota Republican presidential caucuses
  • March 5: Super Tuesday — states and territories holding elections include Alabama, Alaska Republican presidential primary, American Samoa Democratic presidential caucuses, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Iowa Democratic presidential preference, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, Utah Democratic presidential primary and Republican presidential caucuses, Vermont and Virginia.

Access the full 2024 election calendar.

Trump escalates attacks against Haley ahead of next week's New Hampshire primary

Former President Donald Trump on Tuesday went after Nikki Haley while referring to her by her first name, Nimarata, in the latest example of Trump using racist dog whistles to attack his GOP presidential rival.

Haley is the daughter of Indian immigrants and was born Nimarata Nikki Randhawa. She took her husband Michael Haley’s last name after they married.

Trump misspelled Nimarata as “Nimrada” as he attacked her in a new post on his social media platform Truth Social.

“Anyone listening to Nikki ‘Nimrada’ Haley’s wacked out speech last night, would think that she won the Iowa Primary. She didn’t, and she couldn’t even beat a very flawed Ron DeSanctimonious, who’s out of money, and out of hope,” Trump posted on Truth Social.

Trump also recently amplified a post that falsely claimed Haley was ineligible to run for president because her parents were not US citizens at the time of her birth. Haley was born in Bamberg, South Carolina, and is a US citizen.

The attacks echo Trump’s smears against former President Barack Obama. Trump was a chief promoter of the racist lie that Obama was not born in the US and ineligible to be president. Trump also regularly emphasizes Obama’s middle name, Hussein, at campaign rallies.

Sununu expects "strong second" in New Hampshire for Haley

Republican presidential candidate and former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley is endorsed by New Hampshire Governor Chris Sununu at a campaign town hall in Manchester, New Hampshire, on December 12, 2023.

New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu on Tuesday downplayed Nikki Haley’s third-place finish in Iowa and laid out an expectation for a “strong second” in New Hampshire — suggesting she could even surpass that and clinch the GOP primary on January 23.

Sununu, who endorsed Haley last month, told Fox News in an interview he didn’t think there was any “higher expectation” than Haley’s third-place finish in the Iowa caucuses.

“She was challenging Ron (DeSantis) for second when Ron put everything he had into Iowa. Ron hasn’t been in New Hampshire in a month,” he said. He added that Haley is “challenging to actually beat Donald Trump” in the Granite State, where he claimed she was “within single digits.”

As Haley has tried to consolidate a broad anti-Trump coalition in New Hampshire, where undeclared voters can vote in the GOP primary, Sununu concurred that the number of Democrats who had changed their party registration by the October 6 deadline to be able to vote for a Republican was “not significant at all.”

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