Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

2024 New Hampshire Republican presidential primary

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2024 New Hampshire Republican presidential primary
Remove ads

The 2024 New Hampshire Republican presidential primary was held on January 23, 2024,[1] as part of the Republican Party primaries for the 2024 presidential election.

Quick facts 22 Republican National Convention delegates, Turnout ...

22 delegates to the 2024 Republican National Convention were allocated on a proportional basis, as long as the candidate received at least 10% of the statewide vote. Any leftover delegates were to be added to the candidate that receives the most votes in the primary.[2] The New Hampshire primary was the second contest in the nation, held after the Iowa caucuses. The primary was won by former President Donald Trump, defeating former U.N. Ambassador and South Carolina governor Nikki Haley.

After most polls closed at 8:00 PM EST, media outlets began projecting a win for Trump.[3][4] Trump's eleven-point lead wound up equating to an edge just under 36,000 votes. Despite calls to drop out, Haley declined to withdraw from the race after the primary.[5] Haley swept the resort town of Dixville Notch which was the first place in the nation to vote in the 2024 primaries, winning all six votes.[6] Trump became the first non-incumbent Republican candidate in American history to win both the Iowa caucuses and the New Hampshire primary in the same election cycle.[7] Trump also broke the record of number of votes received for any candidate in New Hampshire primary history.[8]

Remove ads

Background

Donald Trump won the 2016 New Hampshire Republican primary with 35.2% of the vote, with closest opponent John Kasich coming in second with 15.7% of the vote. Exit polling by Edison Research concluded that Trump's 2016 primary victory could be credited to support among white voters without a college degree, as well as support from moderate voters.[9]

Procedure

Delegates are proportionally allocated to candidates who received at least 10% of the statewide vote.[2]

Candidates

The following candidates officially filed by the end of the filing deadline on October 27, 2023:[10]

Campaign

Thumb
Trump holds campaign rally in Rochester, New Hampshire.

In January 2023, Trump selected outgoing New Hampshire Republican Party chair Stephen Stepanek to oversee his campaign's operations in the state.[20]

Nikki Haley's campaign purchased $10 million worth of ads to run in New Hampshire and Iowa beginning in December 2023.[21]

New Hampshire Governor Chris Sununu, who considered a presidential candidacy, established a "Live Free or Die committee",[22] though he announced on June 5 that he would not be running for the Republican nomination.[23]

Remove ads

Endorsements

Summarize
Perspective
Nikki Haley

Governor

U.S. Senators

State Senator

State Representative

  • Michael Moffett, Merrimack's District 4 (2022–present), Merrimack's District 9 (2016–2018, 2020–2022)[28]

Mayor

Notable Individual

Donald Trump

Former federal official

Former U.S. Senator

State Senators

State Representative

Notable individual

Withdrawn candidates

Chris Christie (withdrawn)

Former U.S. Representative

Former State Representative

Larry Elder (withdrawn)

State legislator

Ron DeSantis (withdrawn)

State Representatives

  • Jason Osborne, Rockingham's District 4 (2014–present); Majority Leader (2020–present)[38]
  • Lisa Smart, Belknap's District 2 (2022–2024)[39]
  • Matthew Simon, Grafton's District 1 (2020–2024)[40]
  • Brian Cole, Hillsborough's District 26 (2022–present) (previously endorsed Donald Trump)[41]
  • James Spillane, Rockingham's District 2 (2014–present) (previously endorsed Donald Trump)[42]
  • Katherine Prudhomme O'Brien, Rockingham's District 13 (2018–present)[40]
  • Tom Dolan, Rockingham's District 16 (2018–present)[40]
  • Kristine Perez, Rockingham's District 16 (2022–present) (previously endorsed Donald Trump)[43]
  • Debra DiSimone, Rockingham's District 18 (2022–present) (previously endorsed Donald Trump)[41]
Vivek Ramaswamy (withdrawn)

State representatives

  • Richard Brown, Carroll's District 3 (2022–present)[44]
  • Fred Doucette, Rockingham's District 25 (2014–2025); Deputy Majority Leader (2020-2025)[45]
  • David Love, Rockingham's District 13 (2022–present) and District 6 (2018–2022)[44]
  • Mark McLean, Hillsborough's District 15 (2022–present), District 44 (2017–2022), and District 14 (2014–2016)[44]
  • Fred Plett, Hillsborough's District 29 (2022–present) and Hillsborough District 6 (2018–2022)[44]
  • David Rochefort, Grafton's District 1 (2022–present)[44]
  • Susan Vandecasteele, Rockingham's District 25 (2022–present) and District 8 (2020–2022)[44]
  • Peter Varney, Belknap's District 7 (2022–present)[44]
Remove ads

Polling

Summarize
Perspective
Thumb
Local regression graph of all polls conducted since November 2022.

Aggregate polls

More information Source of poll aggregation, Dates administered ...
More information Poll source, Date(s) administered ...
Remove ads

Results

Summarize
Perspective
More information Candidate, Votes ...
More information By county and municipality, County/ Municipality ...
Remove ads

See also

Notes

Summarize
Perspective
  1. Calculated by taking the difference of 100% and all other candidates combined.
  2. Key:
    A – all adults
    RV – registered voters
    LV – likely voters
    V – unclear
  3. "Another candidate" with 0%
  4. Larry Elder & Will Hurd with 0%
  5. Larry Elder, Will Hurd & Perry Johnson with 0%
  6. Perry Johnson with 1%; Ryan Binkley, Larry Elder & Will Hurd with 0%
  7. Will Hurd with 1%; Larry Elder & "Other" with 0%
  8. Larry Elder and Will Hurd with 1%; Refused 1%
  9. Larry Elder and Will Hurd with 1%; Perry Johnson with <1%; Francis Suarez with 0%
  10. Will Hurd with 3%; Ryan Binkley, Larry Elder, and Francis Suarez with 0%
  11. Perry Johnson with 2%; Will Hurd with 1%
  12. "Someone else" with 3%
  13. "Someone else" with 2%; Francis Suarez with 1%; Larry Elder with 0%
  14. Will Hurd with 1%; Francis Suarez with 0%
  15. Calculated by subtracting the candidates' percentages from 100; the source does not give a number
  16. Suarez with 0%
  17. Undecided, Other & Refused
  18. Chris Sununu with 17%; "Undecided, Other & Refused" with 15%
  19. Chris Sununu with 12%; Liz Cheney with 4%; Mike Pompeo with 2%; Kristi Noem with 1%; John Bolton and Marco Rubio with 0%; "Other" with 1%
  20. Chris Sununu with 10%; Liz Cheney with 4%; Mike Pompeo and Glenn Youngkin with 1%; "Someone else" with 1%
  21. Chris Sununu with 14%; Liz Cheney with 2%; Mike Pompeo with 1%; Kristy Noem with 0%; Other with 2%.
  22. Chris Sununu with 7%; Mike Pompeo with 2%; Larry Hogan with 1%; Kristi Noem with 1%; "Someone else" with 3%
  23. Chris Sununu with 13%; Glenn Youngkin with 0%
  24. Liz Cheney, Chris Sununu and Larry Hogan with 4%; Kristi Noem with 2%; Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio with 1%; Mike Pompeo and Glenn Youngkin with 0%
  25. Liz Cheney with 4%; Ted Cruz and Mike Pompeo with 1%; Larry Hogan with 0%
  26. Chris Sununu, Rand Paul and Mike Pompeo with 1%
  27. Ted Cruz, Kristi Noem, and Mike Pompeo with 1%; Rick Scott with 0%; "Other" with 3%
  28. Tom Cotton and Ted Cruz with 2%; Kristi Noem with 1%; Mike Pompeo with 0%; "Other" with 9%
  29. Ted Cruz and Kristi Noem with 2%; Tom Cotton and Mike Pompeo with 0%; "Other" with 9%
  30. Ted Cruz, Kristi Noem and Marco Rubio with 2%; Mitt Romney with 1%; Liz Cheney and John Kasich with 0%
  31. Mitt Romney with 13%; Ted Cruz with 1%; Kristi Noem and Mike Pompeo with 0%
  32. Mitt Romney with 15%; Ted Cruz with 10%; Mike Pompeo with 3%; Kristi Noem with 1%
  33. Mitt Romney with 7%; Ted Cruz with 4%; Donald Trump Jr. with 3%; Tom Cotton and Marco Rubio with 2%; Tucker Carlson with 1%
  34. Donald Trump Jr. with 14%; Ted Cruz with 10%; Mitt Romney with 8%; Tom Cotton with 6%; Tucker Carlson and Marco Rubio with 4%

Partisan clients

  1. Poll sponsored by American Greatness PAC, which supports Trump.
  2. Poll sponsored by Club for Growth
  3. Poll sponsored by the Courageous Conservatives PAC
  4. Poll sponsored by the John Bolton Super PAC
Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads