Lanman87
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Nikki Haley won the Vermont Primary and garnered 15-30% in most states on Super Tuesday. As far as I can tell, no incumbent president (I count Trump as an incumbent) has never lost a state in the Primaries and went on to win the general election.
The latest examples I can find are Ford in 1976, who lost several states to Reagan. Carter in 1980, who lost several states to Kennedy. George H.W. Bush never lost a state to Pat Buchanan in 1992 but Buchanan did win around 30% of the vote in many of the Primaries.
Ford, Carter, and Bush all lost the general election.
The fact that Haley got 10-42% in very conservative states is bad enough but in swing states she got 18 and 35% (AZ and VA). While I'm sure some of those votes are Democrats crossing over the fact remains that if even 15% of Haley voters stay home in the swing states on election day then Trump is in trouble.
Trump better hope that Biden remains in the race because his biggest advantage is that Democrats across the board aren't happy with Biden as the nominee. Trump needs more democrats to stay home on election day than republicans. If the Democrats switch to a younger, well liked candidate at or just before the convention that excites the democratic party and is attractive to swing voters then it will be a short night on election day.
I think Haley only has a future as a Presidential candidate is if a large number of Republicans end up regretting that he won the nomination. Which could happen if Trump gets his hat handed to him on election day or if he becomes President and makes such a mess of things that republicans choose to go with a more traditional republican candidate in four years. If Trump gets re-elected and does a great job as President then we will never hear from Nikki Haley again, except as a talking head on cable shows.
Conventional wisdom says that when you get your parties nomination you go hard to unify the party by appealing to the supporters of the other candidates and attract swing voters by campaigning closer to the political center. However, as we know, Trump isn't a conventional candidate.
The latest examples I can find are Ford in 1976, who lost several states to Reagan. Carter in 1980, who lost several states to Kennedy. George H.W. Bush never lost a state to Pat Buchanan in 1992 but Buchanan did win around 30% of the vote in many of the Primaries.
Ford, Carter, and Bush all lost the general election.
The fact that Haley got 10-42% in very conservative states is bad enough but in swing states she got 18 and 35% (AZ and VA). While I'm sure some of those votes are Democrats crossing over the fact remains that if even 15% of Haley voters stay home in the swing states on election day then Trump is in trouble.
Trump better hope that Biden remains in the race because his biggest advantage is that Democrats across the board aren't happy with Biden as the nominee. Trump needs more democrats to stay home on election day than republicans. If the Democrats switch to a younger, well liked candidate at or just before the convention that excites the democratic party and is attractive to swing voters then it will be a short night on election day.
I think Haley only has a future as a Presidential candidate is if a large number of Republicans end up regretting that he won the nomination. Which could happen if Trump gets his hat handed to him on election day or if he becomes President and makes such a mess of things that republicans choose to go with a more traditional republican candidate in four years. If Trump gets re-elected and does a great job as President then we will never hear from Nikki Haley again, except as a talking head on cable shows.
Conventional wisdom says that when you get your parties nomination you go hard to unify the party by appealing to the supporters of the other candidates and attract swing voters by campaigning closer to the political center. However, as we know, Trump isn't a conventional candidate.