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Nikki Haley laid low on Super Tuesday facing a potential onslaught by Donald Trump as the first votes came in showing her losing to her rival in Virginia and North Carolina.
Haley was hunkered down in her home state of South Carolina while millions of Americans went to the polls.
Her campaign sent out no information on any kind of plans to address supporters while the results came in, even as Trump, who has declared the race all but over and invited hundreds of supporters to his Mar-a-Lago private Florida club.
The Virginia loss deprived Haley of one of the 15 states up for grabs on Tuesday where she had something approaching a shot.
And exit poll information described an electorate that could be open to a candidate like Haley: 72 per cent suburban, majority college educated, and less committed to 'MAGA' than neighboring North Carolina.
The only information on her whereabouts came from a public comment by Haley in a TV interview that she would be in her home state on Super Tuesday.
By contrast, before her defeat in her home state of South Carolina, the candidate had telegraphed that she would campaign in Michigan and on to Super Tuesday.
Leading up to Tuesday night, she has said only that she would remain in the race as long as she was 'competitive.'
Her campaign did not announce any future campaign stops for after Tuesday, even though Trump was not expected to nail down the requisite delegates immediately.
Nor did her campaign organize any kind of a call to try to describe a way forward for the media members covering the lopsided two-person race.
Her campaign's only public presence Tuesday as millions of Americans went to the polls was a new web and a TV appearance by the candidate where Haley pushed back on urgings that she 'get out' of the race for the White House while facing a deluge of potential losses on Super Tuesday.
Haley faced pointed questions about her future when she would get out of the race during a Super Tuesday appearance on Fox & Friends.
‘As much as everybody wants to go and push me out, I’m not ready to get out yet,’ she said as people began voting in 15 states across the country with hundreds of delegates at stake.
‘I'm still sitting there fighting for the people that want a voice, so they deserve that,’ she added.
Haley pushed back when asked about backing away from her debate stage pledge to get behind the eventual nominee, something she has dismissed as her criticisms of Trump have grown increasingly pronounced.
Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley spoke to Fox News Tuesday as millions headed to the polls on Super Tuesday. ‘As much as everybody wants to go and push me out, I’m not ready to get out yet,’ she said
‘If you don't have a good night, are you going to drop out, and when will you realize it's time to unify? Will you unify and support Donald Trump if he does win tonight?’ asked Fox & Friends cohost Ainsley Earhardt.
‘If I were to get out of the race, that would still be the longest presidential general election in the history. I don't know why everybody is so adamant that they have to follow Trump's lead to get me out of this race,’ Haley shot back. ‘All of these people deserve to vote … It’s as pro-American as it gets.’
She said of Trump, who she said was responsible for a series of GOP losses: ‘I haven’t heard him pledge to me that he would support me if I won. So I don’t know why I have to pledge to him that I would support him if I won.
Haley's campaign released a new digital ad Monday where the candidate says Trump had his 'fingerprints' on a series of losses. It begins with a clip of Trump telling supporters they would get 'bored with winning' they would do it so much.
Haley has no public schedule of events that would establish her longer-term plans to continue the fight.
Trump has announced plans to campaign in Georgia next week.
'When will you realize it's time to unify?' asked Fox host Ainsley Earhardt, prompting pushback from Haley
Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump has announced plans to campaign in Georgia next week
A voter fills out his ballot at the Fairfax County Government Center polling place in Fairfax, Virginia, USA, 05 March 2024. The 'Super Tuesday' voters in 15 states and territories will cast their ballots for presidential candidates in the 2024 United States
Trump is not expected to mathematically capture the nomination today.
Haley did announce a Louisiana leadership team, including several former members of Congress, on Monday, but no trip to the Pelican State.
Asked on CNN Monday if she could name states she could win and how many she could point to in order to justify staying in, Haley avoided a direct answer.
‘Well, we've said as long as we're competitive, we have been in 10 states just in the past week. I just finished a rally here in Houston, Texas, we have well over 1,000 people show up,’ she said.