Haley Dismisses Speculation of Joining Ticket With RFK Jr.

During a Feb. 26 press conference, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley shot down speculation she will run as a third-party candidate, possibly even with Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

“I have not spoken with anyone about anything other than running as a Republican,” Ms. Haley told The Epoch Times when asked if she had spoken to Mr. Kennedy, who, like Ms. Haley, is seeking to position himself as an alternative to incumbent President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump.

“I have not talked to anyone. I have not put time into that. That’s not anything I’ve ever thought about. I’m running in a Republican primary,” she continued.

Ms. Haley previously dismissed talk that she might run with “No Labels,” another group aiming to run candidates they perceive as centrist.

Ms. Haley spoke to press at the Amway Grand Plaza, a hotel in Grand Rapids, Michigan, ahead of an event preceding the state’s Feb. 27 presidential primary.

The presidential primary will be followed by a Republican Party convention on March 2, where members of the state party will decide how 39 of the state’s 55 delegates are allocated. Just 16 delegates will be awarded based on the results of the primary.

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The convention arrangement is a compromise after the state Legislature, dominated by Democrats, moved the state’s primary up from mid-March. That ran afoul of Republican National Committee (RNC) rules.

Michigan GOP Turmoil

The Michigan GOP has been in a leadership conflict between former chairwoman Kristina Karamo and former U.S. Rep. Pete Hoekstra, the latter having been previously endorsed by President Trump. The RNC voted to recognize Mr. Hoekstra as head of the state party earlier this month, but Ms. Karamo and a group of state party members maintain that she is still the state party leader, and she intends to hold her own convention to compete with Mr. Hoekstra’s.

Before taking questions from the press, Ms. Haley said that Republicans in Michigan were harmed after President Trump’s victory in 2016. She cited a 2012 “right to work” law, repealed in 2023, as a victory prior to the era of President Trump.

Her campaign has suffered a number of blows in the hours since she lost the South Carolina Republican presidential primary, a contest in the state she once led as governor. Ms. Haley netted less than 40 percent of the vote there. She had previously said a total above what she received in New Hampshire, 43.2 percent, was what she needed to achieve in South Carolina.

Rep. Ralph Norman (R-S.C.), one of her high-profile Republican supporters in her home state, spoke bluntly with The Epoch Times when asked about the result.

“The people spoke for Trump,” he said.

In addition, the Koch family’s Americans for Prosperity Action (AFP) has stopped backing Ms. Haley.
Just days before the South Carolina primary, Vivek Ramaswamy, a surrogate for President Trump in South Carolina, told The Epoch Times he would “invite [AFP] to reconsider their decision” to support Ms. Haley.

“And you know what? I’m optimistic that, with some forethought, they actually will,” he continued.

He also speculated that Ms. Haley was lining up support for a No Labels run.

The Haley campaign has touted raising $1 million “from grassroots supporters alone” in the day following her defeat in South Carolina.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Original News Source Link – Epoch Times

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