Live updates: Super Tuesday primary elections and caucuses | CNN Politics

Trump and Biden prepare for rematch as Haley bows out of GOP race

nikki haley trump split 03 06 2024
Hear what Haley said about Trump as she dropped out of race
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What we covered here

  • Haley’s exit: Nikki Haley announced Wednesday she is suspending her presidential campaign following a series of losses on Super Tuesday, leaving former President Donald Trump as the presumptive GOP nominee. Haley — Trump’s final remaining rival in the race — congratulated but did not endorse the former president.
  • Big night for Biden and Trump: President Joe Biden and Trump dominated their Super Tuesday races across the country as they gear up for a November rematch.
  • Few surprises: There was little drama on Super Tuesday. The only close race was in Vermont, where Haley notched her sole win of the day. And Biden was handed his first primary defeat Tuesday in the US territory of American Samoa.
  • Other key races: Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff will face GOP Steve Garvey in California’s Senate race. In North Carolina, Republican Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson and Democratic Attorney General Josh Stein will compete in the governor’s race.

Our live coverage has ended. Read more about Super Tuesday in the posts below.

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Trump calls for debates with Biden hours after Haley suspends campaign

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks at a Super Tuesday election night party, Tuesday, March 5, at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida.

Former President Donald Trump on Wednesday called for debates with President Joe Biden hours after Nikki Haley suspended her presidential campaign. 

Trump, who did not participate in any GOP primary debates, has previously said he wanted to debate Biden in the general election. 

Biden’s campaign responded, saying it’s a conversation they will have “at the appropriate time” and urged the former president to watch Biden’s State of the Union address on Thursday.

This post has been updated with the Biden campaign’s response.

Here's where the delegate count stands after Super Tuesday

President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump are leading in delegates as they become their party’s likely nominees, setting up a rematch in November.

Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley announced Wednesday she is suspending her presidential campaign following a series of losses on Super Tuesday.

Here’s the latest CNN delegate estimate:

On the Republican side: 

Delegates won on Super Tuesday: 

  • Trump: 783 
  • Haley: 47

24 Republican delegates from Super Tuesday contests are still to be allocated.

A total of 1,215 delegates are required to win the Republican nomination. Here’s how many GOP delegates have been won to date: 

  • Trump: 1,059
  • Haley: 90 

On the Democratic side: 

Delegates won on Super Tuesday: 

  • Biden: 1,381 
  • Uncommitted: 11
  • Jason Palmer: 3

25 Democratic delegates from the Super Tuesday contests are still to be allocated.

A total of 1,968 pledged delegates are required to win the Democratic nomination. Here’s how many Democratic delegates have been won to date:

  • Biden: 1,587
  • Uncommitted: 13
  • Jason Palmer: 3 

In Arizona, Democrats look to drive up turnout in key county

In this November 2022 photo, people wait in line to vote at a polling station at the Woods Memorial Library in Tucson, Arizona.

Arizona Democrats are facing a dilemma in Pima County. Home to Tucson, the blue county boasts a deep well of Democratic voters, but many with deep uncertainty about President Joe Biden’s age and his administration’s handling of the Israel-Hamas war. Read more about that here.

But state and county Democrats say they have a strategy to target these unenthused voters: Focus on local and state issues to drive up turnout and reap the benefits at the top of the ticket.

Advocates are gathering signatures to place a state constitutional amendment enshrining abortion rights on the November ballot. They’re hoping to replicate the success of similar efforts across the country since the fall of Roe v. Wade by turning out Democrats, independents and even some supportive Republicans.

“A lot of people have been extremely shocked to see women’s rights reversed after all of these years,” said Corinne Cooper, who has been volunteering since September to get Arizonans to sign the petition.

Democrats here point to competitive US Senate and House races as a draw for centrist and progressive voters alike, along with the possibility that the party could flip both chambers of the state Legislature – a duopoly they haven’t enjoyed since 1966.

Democrats are also counting on another factor: fear about what a second Trump presidency would look like. Becky Richards, a 37-year-old Realtor, moved to Arizona from much more Democratic Illinois a few years ago.

“It’s terrifying to see that Trump is basically doing nothing, and still gaining momentum,” she said. “In Arizona, that scares me, in a way, because I see the Trump flags and the MAGA hats and things as you drive through the state.”

If it comes down to a rematch between Biden and Trump, Richards said that despite her hope for a younger candidate, she’ll vote for Biden “no question.”

McConnell defends Trump endorsement despite blaming him for Jan. 6 insurrection

In this March 2020 photo, Sen. Mitch McConnell speaks as House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy and President Donald Trump listen in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC. 

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell defended his endorsement of former President Donald Trump as the GOP presidential nominee, despite Trump’s barrage of attacks against him and his wife and McConnell’s harsh criticism of the former president after the January 6 insurrection. 

Earlier Wednesday, Trump thanked McConnell for the endorsement. The pair have had a rocky relationship over the past few years, but Trump says he’s willing to work with him.

“Thank you, Mitch,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “I look forward to working with you and a Republican Senate MAJORITY to MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!”

In Arizona, Biden has a problem where he can least afford it

President Joe Biden has a problem where he can least afford it: with Democratic voters in Pima County, Arizona. The county, home to Tucson, boasts a deep well of Democratic voters, but many with deep uncertainty about the president’s age and his administration’s handling of the Israel-Hamas war.

Just how critical is Pima County? Biden won Arizona in 2020 by about 10,000 votes out of more than 3 million cast. He bested Trump by nearly 100,000 votes in Pima County. He’ll need every one of those votes, and maybe more, if he hopes to keep Arizona — and his job — come November.

Tucson business owner Jenna Majchrzak, a self-described “reluctant Democrat,” sums up the expected November choice between Biden and presumptive GOP nominee Donald Trump this way: “It’s hard to vote for someone with multiple felony charges,” she says, “and it’s also very hard to vote for someone that is pro-genocide.”

It’s an opinion shared by many Democratic voters whom CNN talked to in this diverse county of just over a million residents, with Mexico on its southern border and the Tohono O’odham Nation to the west.

Grady Campbell, a 19-year-old sophomore at the University of Arizona, is looking forward to voting in his first presidential election. But — and it’s a big one — he’s so put off by the Biden administration’s approach to Israel’s offensive in Gaza that he’s voting for Marianne Williamson in the March 19 Democratic primary.  

Another concern for some Pima County Democrats: Biden’s age. 

“It’s not even so much even the mental acuity as it is just kind of being out of touch,” Amanda Bruno, 31, said of the 81-year-old president. “I’d love to see somebody a little bit younger, who’s whose impact will be felt by their generation.”

How are state and county Democrats responding to the challenge of unenthused voters? Read more about that here.

White House implies Biden does not want Trump to receive classified briefings as presumptive GOP nominee

The White House implied that President Joe Biden still does not want to see former President Donald Trump receive classified intelligence briefings — even as Trump is set to officially become the Republican nominee for president. 

It’s tradition for past presidents to be allowed to request and receive intelligence briefings. In 2021, Biden said he didn’t believe Trump should receive the briefings due to his “erratic behavior unrelated to the insurrection.” 

“I’d rather not speculate out loud,” Biden previously said when asked what he fears could happen if Trump continued to receive the briefings. “I just think that there is no need for him to have the — the intelligence briefings. What value is giving him an intelligence briefing? What impact does he have at all, other than the fact he might slip and say something?”

Asked if Biden would do anything to try to block Trump from receiving the briefings, Jean-Pierre declined to answer on Wednesday.

“I don’t have anything to add,” she said, “but the president was very clear about how he felt about that, and I would say those comments certainly do stand today.” 

The nominees of the two major parties have received classified intelligence briefings from top government officials for more than 60 years, a decision aimed at facilitating a smooth transition from candidate to commander in chief.

Supreme Court sets April 25 argument date in Trump immunity case

A woman under a purple umbrella walks past the Supreme Court on Wednesday, February 28, in Washington, DC.

The Supreme Court will hear arguments on April 25 in the blockbuster case dealing with whether former President Donald Trump may claim immunity from prosecution in the federal election subversion case.

The court previously said it would hear arguments in the case during the week of April 22. On Wednesday, it announced that it would hear the case during a rare Thursday session.

The timing of the case has drawn considerable scrutiny as it could help determine whether Trump faces trial over his efforts to overturn the 2020 election before the November 2024 election. 

Special counsel Jack Smith, who brought the criminal charges, has sought to speed up the proceedings over Trump’s immunity claim so that he can bring the matter to trial as quickly as possible.

An original trial date that had been set for early March already has been postponed.

Minnesota Rep. Dean Phillips ends his presidential campaign and endorses Biden

Rep. Dean Phillips speaks to reporters following a campaign stop in Concord, New Hampshire, on January 19.

Minnesota Rep. Dean Phillips is ending his long-shot Democratic primary challenge to President Joe Biden.

He thanked his supporters, and urged them to do everything they can “to help keep a man of decency and integrity in the White House. That’s Joe Biden.”

Analysis: Why Donald Trump is so different from traditional candidates

Former president Donald Trump steps out to deliver remarks at a campaign rally at the SNHU Arena in Manchester, New Hampshire, on January 20.

Donald Trump has put America on notice – his second term would be even more disruptive and turbulent than his first.

The new presumptive Republican nominee booked his place in a general election rematch with President Joe Biden when his distant, last-remaining rival Nikki Haley conceded to reality and suspended her campaign on Wednesday.

The triumph of the once and possibly future president – an incredible comeback given his attempt to steal the 2020 election and a crush of criminal and civil trials threatening his liberty and fortune – sets up one of the most fateful elections in American history. His demonstrated record of contempt for democratic institutions means that the country’s political, legal and constitutional guardrails are facing a severe new test from a GOP candidate who could be a convicted felon by Election Day and who may see restored executive power as a tool to thwart federal prosecutions.

And Trump’s return to the threshold of the presidency will send shockwaves around a world still recovering from his volatile leadership and affinity for autocrats and send a warning to Ukraine, a nation fighting for its survival.

The reason Trump is so different from a traditional candidate is that he’s not campaigning as a fresh new voice pulsating with optimism for the future or brimming with policy ideas to bring the nation together. He’s portraying America as a dystopian, failed state overwhelmed by lawlessness, urban blight and slipping toward World War III abroad. In a classic trope of dictators, he’s promising to flush out enemies within, vowing revenge on political foes and posing as a strongman while conflating his own personal, political interests with the nation’s.

Read Collinson’s full analysis on Trump here.

Haley’s lone House GOP supporter urges her to unify behind Trump

Nikki Haley’s lone House Republican supporter, Rep. Ralph Norman of South Carolina, is urging her to help unite the party after she announced she will withdraw from the presidential race, telling CNN that he is speaking with former President Donald Trump later today. 

“It’s time to unite. I’ll be supporting President Trump 100%. We got a country (to) save,” he told CNN’s Manu Raju. 

Norman, who did not speak to Haley this morning, said he hopes that she will ultimately support Trump. 

“We’ll see. Hopefully she will,” he said, adding: “It’s not about Democrat and Republican, it’s about getting this country back on track.” 

Norman added that Haley “did a good job” in her campaign, “but the people chose Donald Trump. That’s a good thing that it played out like this.” 

Is Nikki Haley the future – or the past – of the Republican Party?

Haley walks off stage after announcing the suspension of her presidential campaign at her campaign headquarters on March 6 in Daniel Island, South Carolina. 

Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley has emerged from the presidential primary like few losing candidates manage to do – in a far more elevated position than when announcing her candidacy a year ago.

Haley, whose political career spans from the Tea Party to the Trump era, offered a warning about the isolationist movement that is growing inside the Republican Party. 

The question of Haley’s next steps will be answered in the months and years to come. But it speaks to a far larger question about whether her views are the future – or the past – of the GOP.

Congressional Republicans set aside past concerns over Trump and rally behind him as nominee

US Senate Minority Whip Sen. John Thune talks to members of the press as he walks in a hallway at the US Capitol on February 29, in Washington, DC.

Some congressional Republicans are putting aside concerns over former President Donald Trump as the party’s nominee and uniting around him following a dominant Super Tuesday showing that led to his last primary challenger dropping out. 

Senate GOP Whip John Thune, who has been vocal in the past about his concerns over how Trump will fare with suburban voters, told CNN that he believes the Republican ticket will deliver a unified message. 

“We’ll all go out and all help aggressively win those people in suburban areas (and) independent voters. It’s now a … straight up one-on-one,” he told CNN’s Manu Raju. 

And Rep. John Duarte, a California Republican who represents a district President Joe Biden won last cycle, told CNN that he’s focused on who he is running against and that he plans to endorse Trump. 

Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick, who also represents a Biden-won Pennsylvania district, declined to say whether he would be endorsing Trump. 

Biden teams look to foreign affairs in hopes of peeling off Haley voters

As President Joe Biden’s advisers look for ways to appeal to Nikki Haley supporters, one area of potential overlap is emerging: foreign policy and world affairs.

It’s not an issue traditionally at the center of presidential elections, which usually revolve around domestic matters and the economy. But for the president and his team, America’s role in the world has become a key point of contrast with Donald Trump – fertile ground, they believe, for picking off disillusioned Republicans.

In his statement making a direct appeal to bring Haley’s voters into the fold, Biden made specific mention of her attempts to call out Donald Trump for “cowering before Vladimir Putin” and for her support of NATO.

Likewise, in her speech announcing the suspension of her campaign, Haley spent time during the brief remarks describing the “moral imperative” of standing with traditional American allies like Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan.

To be sure, she wasn’t endorsing Biden’s approach — she said “our world is on fire because of America’s retreat.” But in voicing support for longstanding American alliances and a muscular role abroad, she found herself more aligned with Biden than with Trump, who has questioned NATO’s role and said he would encourage Russia to invade NATO members who don’t meet defense spending targets.

There is little expectation among Biden’s team that world affairs will drive many votes in November, but in the abstract, they think issues like the war in Ukraine and support for NATO provide a clear point of contrast with Trump. It’s also an issue they believe will resonate with donors – potentially those who contributed to Haley’s campaign – as they look to peel off support.

However, even as he looks to appeal to her supporters on foreign policy, he faces discontent within his own party for his handling of Israel’s war in Gaza – an indication that the issue will remain a political flashpoint going forward.

"A tale of two statements": Haley aide reacts to the difference in Biden and Trump responses to Haley's exit

Nikki Haley announces the suspension of her presidential campaign at her campaign headquarters on March 6, in Daniel Island, South Carolina. 

Nikki Haley’s campaign spokesperson Olivia Perez-Cubas described the statements from President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump on Haley’s exit from the race as “a tale of two statements.”

Biden’s statement said there is a place for Haley voters in his campaign. In contrast, Trump invited Haley supporters to join him while saying the former South Carolina governor was “trounced” on Super Tuesday and that most of her donations came from Democrats.

Trump campaign fundraises off Haley's exit from the race

The Trump campaign blasted out a fundraising text to supporters on Wednesday shortly after former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley announced she was suspending her campaign, telling them, “It was a hard-fought race, but now it’s time for us to unite as a party and defeat Joe Biden!” 

“Nikki Haley ends her campaign!” the appeal read in all caps. “If we’re going to win back the White House, it will be all because of what you do right here, right now.” 

The text said former President Donald Trump is calling on one million supporters to donate following the news.

RNC acknowledges Trump is the presumptive nominee

Former President Donald Trump looks on during his Super Tuesday election night party at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida.

The Republican National Committee formally acknowledged former President Trump as the 2024 presumptive Republican nominee for president on Wednesday, shortly after former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley officially dropped out of the Republican primary. 

The statement comes just days before an expected leadership change at the RNC where McDaniel is likely to step down from her post and Michael Whatley, the chairman of the North Carolina Republican Party, is expected to succeed her. Trump had endorsed Whatley to lead the RNC and has also said he would install key lieutenants at the organization once he became the presumptive nominee. 

Once a party has a presumptive or formal nominee that party’s national committee normally melds closely with the nominee’s campaign. In this case, the RNC is set to align closely with the Trump campaign going forward.  

Elon Musk says he's not donating in presidential race

Elon Musk attends a conference in Paris in June 2023.

Billionaire Elon Musk on Wednesday shot down speculation that he may provide financial support to former President Donald Trump’s campaign.

The public declaration comes after the New York Times reported this week that Musk met with Trump at Mar-a-Lago in recent days. CNN confirmed the meeting with Musk, one of several Trump held with donors in Palm Beach last weekend as he seeks to raise more money for his financially strained campaign.

This isn’t the first time this cycle Musk has flirted with supporting a presidential candidate only to pull back. Musk once praised Ron DeSantis’ White House bid and infamously hosted the Florida governor’s glitchy presidential campaign launch on X. However, Musk ultimately backed away from DeSantis.

Biden campaign makes an appeal to Haley supporters

President Joe Biden speaks during an event in the East Room of the White House in July 2023.

President Joe Biden made a clear appeal to Nikki Haley’s supporters in the aftermath of her exit from the race, praising her “courage” in standing up to former President Donald Trump. 

Biden heralded Haley for her role in her party: “It takes a lot of courage to run for President – that’s especially true in today’s Republican Party, where so few dare to speak the truth about Donald Trump. Nikki Haley was willing to speak the truth about Trump: about the chaos that always follows him, about his inability to see right from wrong, about his cowering before Vladimir Putin.”

The Biden campaign is setting out to earn the votes of moderate Republican voters turned off by Trump. Biden campaign communications director Michael Tyler said Wednesday there is a “home” for Haley voters with the Biden team in the moments before Haley ended her candidacy. 

Haley voters “agreed with Nikki Haley when she stood up to Trump for the chaos, the division, the extremism that he represents,” Tyler told CNN’s John Berman Wednesday morning. Haley voters, he added, “rejected MAGA extremism” in 2020 and 2022, and “are now rejecting Donald Trump and MAGA extremism moving forward.”

Republicans spent more than $303 million on ads during the presidential primary

Nikki Haley suspended her presidential campaign this morning, ending a costly fight for the Republican nomination that drew a total of over $303 million in ad spending from the combined field of GOP candidates and outside groups, and saw the top candidates devote tens of millions to attacking each other.

Haley’s network spent about $82 million on ads, with about $17.9 million coming from her campaign and $64.4 million from SFA Fund, the lead super PAC supporting her bid. In addition, Americans For Prosperity Action, the Koch-aligned super PAC backing Haley, spent about $8 million on ads supporting Haley.

Overall, comparing the lead candidates and their main allied PACs, Haley’s network spent the most on ads in the GOP presidential primary, about $82.3 million. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and his super PACs spent the second most, about $60.4 million, while former President Donald Trump and his PACs spent the third most, about $60.8 million. 

According to the Haley campaign’s most recent fundraising reports and public statements, it likely ended with some untapped resources. Haley’s campaign reported nearly $13 million in cash on hand as of the end of 2023, and had recently announced it raised $12 million in the month of February.

Trump goes after Haley as she drops out and invites Haley supporters to join his movement

Former President Donald Trump greets the crowd at his Super Tuesday election night party at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida.

As Nikki Haley suspended her campaign Wednesday morning, former President Donald Trump posted on social media that the former South Carolina governor got “trounced” on Super Tuesday and invited her supporters to join his political movement. 

“Nikki Haley got trounced last night, in record setting fashion, despite the fact that Democrats, for reasons unknown, are allowed to vote in Vermont, and various other Republican Primaries. Much of her money came from Radical Left Democrats, as did many of her voters, almost 50%, according to the polls,” Trump posted.

He continued, “At this point, I hope she stays in the “race” and fights it out until the end! I’d like to thank my family, friends, and the Great Republican Party for helping me to produce, by far, the most successful Super Tuesday in history, and would further like to invite all of the Haley supporters to join the greatest movement in the history of our Nation.”

Reminder: Vermont does not have party registration. All voters can choose which primary to vote in.