Nikki Haley’s only hope is to wait for Trump to defeat himself



 

The Republican presidential primary seems pretty much over, but try telling that to Nikki Haley.

The former South Carolina governor — now Donald Trump’s sole primary opponent — decisively lost Tuesday’s primary in New Hampshire by more than 10 percentage points.

Haley doesn’t seem to think it’s too late to win the nomination, though, and has no intentions of dropping out of the race, saying “this race is far from over” and “there are dozens of states left to go.”

Haley hasn’t offered much of an explanation for why she’s choosing to stay in a race she seems to have no shot of winning. Following a landslide victory in Iowa, Trump won in nearly every demographic group in New Hampshire. Much of Haley’s support came from independents, who are able to vote in New Hampshire’s Republican primary. No Republican has ever won their party’s nomination after losing both Iowa and New Hampshire.

Haley knows all of this. She knows she can’t beat Trump. And she won’t. She’s just waiting for him to beat himself.

Trump has a lot of baggage, and while he has managed to outrun it so far, it’s only a matter of time before it starts to catch up with him. Haley has said that she wants to stay in the race at least through Super Tuesday, which also happens to be one day after the scheduled opening date of Trump’s first criminal trial (though it may be delayed). That trial, which involves charges of conspiring to obstruct the 2020 election, is only one chapter of Trump’s legal troubles. The trial for his alleged mishandling of classified documents is scheduled for May.

At some point, the U.S. Supreme Court will also rule on whether Trump can be disqualified from the ballot under the 14th Amendment, which could limit his path to his party’s nomination as well as to the presidency itself.