All three remaining major candidates for president could, to some degree, benefit from Nikki Haleyโs exit.
Now that the final major GOP challenger, Nikki Haley, has suspended her presidential run, the three remaining major candidates are vying for her voters.
At about the time that Ms. Haley announced her departure from the 2024 race on March 6, the Republican frontrunner, former President Donald Trump, and the Democrat incumbent, President Joe Biden, each made a public statement welcoming Ms. Haleyโs supporters to change their allegiance.
The most prominent independent candidate, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., made no similar outright appeal to Ms. Haleyโs voters. Instead, he pointed out that polls have shown that many U.S. voters dread a Biden-Trump rematch, and he presented himself as an alternative for voters seeking โhope and healingโ and โan inspiring vision for America.โ
All three major candidates will benefit in some measure from Ms. Haleyโs departure from the race, as hurdles loom for each of them.
Mr. Kennedy is saddled with collecting massive numbers of signatures to meet the ballot-qualifying thresholds that states set for independent candidates.
Citing the networkโs research in multiple Super Tuesday states, ABC News reported, โSuper Tuesday exit poll results showed challenges for Joe Biden and Donald Trump alike, including broad, substantive gaps between Trump and Nikki Haley voters.โ
Leaning Left?
At least half of Ms. Haleyโs voters in Virginia and North Carolina โsaid they approve of Bidenโs work as president, as did 30 percent in California,โ ABC News reported, suggesting that those voters would lean toward casting ballots for President Biden rather than President Trump.
Even so, pollster Rich Baris told The Epoch Times that he doubts that the Haley voting bloc would exert much influence over the raceโs outcome.
โHaleyโs primary vote is largely made up of โresistance’ voters and a rather small percentage of Republican voters who wouldโve rather had a different choice than the former president,โ he said. โThe latter will come home and unify behind the Republican nominee. The former will do what they told exit pollsters: support the Democrat as they did in 2020.โ
A key point, he said, is that โthe general election polling data suggest Trump doesnโt need to do much to snare voters who didnโt vote for him in the primary.โ
Byย Janice Hisle