Ms. Haley faces long odds against Donald J. Trump in the next major Republican nominating contest, but has signaled her intent to stay in.
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Nikki Haley at a campaign event on Thursday in Columbia, S.C. Her campaign said it had raised its biggest monthly fund-raising total to date in January.
Officials with Nikki Haley’s campaign said Monday that she had raised $16.5 million in January, her biggest monthly fund-raising total to date, adding a new infusion of cash to the $14.6 million her campaign brought into the new year to keep the nomination fight with Donald J. Trump going.
Public polling has shown that Ms. Haley, the former South Carolina governor, has made little progress in closing the gap with the former president, either in her home state, which holds its Republican primary election on Feb. 24, or nationally.
But a burst of fund-raising and national publicity, including a surprise appearance on NBC’s “Saturday Night Live,” have tamped down chatter that she could withdraw from the race imminently. Her announced fund-raising numbers in January, which included $11.7 million from digital and direct mail outreach and 69,274 new donors, signaled a desire for her not to fold.
“We are going to have the resources to go the distance,” Betsy Ankeny, Ms. Haley’s campaign manager, told reporters on Monday morning. “We will continue to fight as long as have we momentum and have the resources to do so.”
Ms. Ankeny freely admitted that Ms. Haley faced long odds, but argued that she had outperformed public polling in the New Hampshire primary two weeks ago. Since then, Ms. Haley has barnstormed through South Carolina, while Mr. Trump has yet to hold a public event in the state since New Hampshire.
“This is a race to be the leader of the free world,” Ms. Ankeny said. “It should be hard.”
Ms. Ankeny pressed the case that if Mr. Trump won the nomination, public attention would shift to his liabilities, especially the four criminal cases pending against him, his propensity for temper tantrums and the deep dislike that many voters hold for the former president.
Regardless of current polling, “we have seen this movie before,” she said, pointing to Republicans’ loss of the House in 2018 and the White House and Senate in 2020.
“Republicans will lose” a rematch between Mr. Trump and President Biden in November, she predicted.
Jonathan Weisman is a politics writer, covering campaigns with an emphasis on economic and labor policy. He is based in Chicago. More about Jonathan Weisman
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Source: nytimes.com