Nikki Haley won her first win in the Republican presidential nomination contest this Sunday, NBC News and the AP predicted.
Haley prevailed in the D.C. primary, a result her campaign is keen to use as a springboard for upcoming Super Tuesday races, in which a total of 15 states plus American Samoa will participate.
Haley's campaign managed to get a whopping 63% of the vote from DC Renos, while Trump got 33%. The capital saw a voter turnout of just over 2,000
Finally, Hailey can now start bragging about “winning” the swamp.
Al-Tal newspaper reported:
The former UN ambassador's victory breaks a streak of more than six victories for former President Trump to start GOP contests for the nomination. It's a much-needed victory for Haley to show she can outpace Trump somewhere, but she still has a long way to go.
She pledged to stay in the race at least until Super Tuesday this week, when more than a dozen states will vote. But she was unable to win any of the early voting states in January and February, and clearly none of the upcoming states emerged as a clear chance for her to win.
However, winning the winner-take-all primary in D.C. would give her all 19 delegates. Voting took place in the region over three days, from Friday to Sunday.
Trump still has an early lead in delegates that will likely grow significantly on Tuesday as additional states vote. Candidates need at least 1,215 delegates to win the Republican nomination mathematically.
The Democratic Party primary election is scheduled to be held in D.C. in June.
A corrupt place like Washington, D.C., is the only place neocon Nikki Haley can win. That should tell you everything you need to know.
Trump still needs 1,215 delegates to win the Republican nomination, according to NBC News.
So, Nikki Haley is still running around doing the dirty work for the Democratic Party and the Deep State and attacking President Trump on a daily basis.
On Saturday, Nikki Haley lost three more contests to President Donald Trump in the states of Idaho, Missouri and Michigan. It was another clean sweep for Trump.
Despite her losses, Haley backed away from her promise to support her former boss Donald Trump — and suggested she might stay in the primary race until July.
It should be noted that Republican support is not what is keeping Nikki in the race. It's the support of the Democrats.
In New Hampshire, Democratic voters admitted to voting for Nikki Haley in the primary.
In South Carolina, again, nearly half of its voters were Biden voters.
This is what she wanted.
A new Sienna-NY Times poll shows that nearly half of Nikki's support comes from Biden voters!
Amy Walter From Cook Policy Reported tweeted: “Meanwhile, New York Times/Siena poll throws cold water on the theory that Haley's strong showing in suburban districts = a sign of weakness for Trump overall: “Near majority of Mrs. Haley's supporters (48-31) They say they voted for Mr. Biden in the last election instead of Mr. Trump.