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Between Trump and DeSantis, Nikki Haley sees an opening

Toward the end of her stump speech at an Italian restaurant in Denison, Iowa, Nikki Haley offers a veiled critique of former President Donald Trump, urging voters to “leave the drama and the baggage of the past.”

“Don’t elect someone who is going to win a primary and not win a general,” says the former ambassador to the United Nations, without naming names.

Why We Wrote This

The former South Carolina governor could be uniquely positioned to unite the GOP’s warring factions. All she needs is for the front-runners to fail.

Like every other Republican White House hopeful not named Trump, Ms. Haley is attempting a difficult – some would say impossible – balancing act: Wooing Trump supporters as a more electable alternative, while also cultivating the Trump haters.

So far, trying to have it both ways has left Ms. Haley in no man’s land: She’s polling in the single digits. Still, it’s early. And some see the former South Carolina governor as one of the few figures who stands a chance of uniting a deeply fractured party after a tumultuous few election cycles. 

“There are a lot of really wonderful Donald Trump supporters that were here in this audience, but they are excited about seeing new faces too,” Iowa Sen. Joni Ernst tells the Monitor after the event in Denison. “The fact that they are here to listen to her is pretty telling.” 

Nikki Haley is speaking to some three dozen voters, mostly women, over pizza and sodas at an Italian restaurant in Denison, Iowa. Toward the end of her 20-minute stump speech, the former ambassador to the United Nations offers a critique of former President Donald Trump, albeit in diplomatically careful language.

“We have to leave the drama and the baggage of the past,” says Ms. Haley. “Don’t elect someone who is going to win a primary and not win a general. You know what I’m talking about.”

Since launching her presidential bid in February, Ms. Haley has avoided attacking her former boss by name, instead making veiled comments about electability and the need for “a new generation” of leaders. Like every other Republican White House hopeful not named Trump, she’s attempting a difficult – some would say impossible – balancing act: Trying to persuade wavering Trump supporters that they ought to go with someone else, without provoking the ire of the former president’s die-hard fans, while simultaneously cultivating the Trump haters who are looking for a conservative alternative.

Why We Wrote This

The former South Carolina governor could be uniquely positioned to unite the GOP’s warring factions. All she needs is for the front-runners to fail.

It’s a familiar dynamic to anyone who watched the 2016 primary campaign, and it may well result in a similar outcome this time. So far, Mr. Trump is dominating in the polls, while Ms. Haley has been stuck in the low single digits.

Still, it’s early, and much could happen in the nine months before the Iowa caucuses. Mr. Trump is under criminal indictment and contending with multiple investigations. Lately, the second most popular Republican, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, has seen his poll numbers plummet before even announcing his campaign, creating a potential opening for a Trump-adjacent-but-not-Trump candidate.

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