Trump continues to hold commanding lead over GOP rival Nikki Haley
By Fox News Staff Fox News
Published January 18, 2024 8:35pm ESTUpdated February 9, 2024 7:50am EST
Donald Trump easily wins Nevada GOP caucuses after SCOTUS hears Colorado ballot case
Brewer Group CEO Jack Brewer joined ‘Fox & Friends First’ to discuss his take on the Supreme Court hearing arguments in the Trump Colorado ballot case and the damning report on Biden’s handling of classified documents.
After sweeping Nevada’s GOP presidential caucus,former President Donald Trump has his eyes on the next major contest on the 2024 Republican nominating calendar — South Carolina.
Trump’s convincing win in Nevada — where 26 delegates were at stake — came hours after he won a landslide victory in a presidential caucus run by the U.S. Virgin Islands GOP.
Here’s a snapshot of where the battle to lead the Republican Party stands.
https://flo.uri.sh/visualisation/14732464/embed?auto=1
A Flourish chart
GOP DELEGATE COUNT AFTER NEVADA:
https://flo.uri.sh/visualisation/15353792/embed?auto=1
A Flourish chart
- Trump: 62
- Haley: 17
- DeSantis: 9
- Ramaswamy: 3
DELEGATES NEEDED TO WIN: 1,215
DELEGATES REMAINING: 2,338

Former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley and former President Donald Trump (Getty Images)
DEMOCRAT DELEGATE COUNT AFTER NEVADA:
https://flo.uri.sh/visualisation/16746628/embed?auto=1
A Flourish chart
DELEGATES NEEDED TO WIN: 1,968
DELEGATES REMAINING: 3,843

President Biden and Rep. Dean Phillips (AP Photo)
ONE NEW POLL: According to the results of a new ABC News/Ipsos poll, both President Biden and former President Trump are too old to lead the country. Eighty-six percent of Americans think Biden, 81, is too old to serve another term as president, while 62% think the same of Trump, who is 77.
A look at the cross-tabs shows that responses broke along party lines with 73% of Democrats believing Biden is too old to serve another term compared to just 35% of Republicans who believe the same thing about Trump.
The poll was conducted between Feb. 9-10 and surveyed a random sample of 528 U.S. adults, with a margin of sampling error of 4.5 points.
TWO NEW VICTORY LAPS: Trump’s Nevada caucus victory on Thursday was never in doubt, as he was the only major candidate in a contest run by a friendly state party in which only registered Republicans could vote. His win came hours after he won a landslide victory in a presidential caucus run by the U.S. Virgin Islands GOP. “Is there anyway we can call the election?” Trump said in his victory speech.
Thursday’s Nevada caucus came two days after Trump was a winner in Nevada’s state-run Republican presidential primary, even though he wasn’t on the ballot. Meanwhile, President Biden hit the jackpot in Nevada on Tuesday, with a third-straight ballot box victory in the 2024 Democratic presidential nomination race.
ONE NEW FUNDRAISING SWEEP: Haley hauled in $1.7 million during in-person fundraising events on Tuesday and Wednesday in California, the Haley campaign shared first with Fox News. While in California, the former two-term South Carolina governor held a pair of campaign events, her first in one of the 15 states that hold nominating contests on Super Tuesday in early March.
ONE RENEWED CALL FOR COMPETENCY: Haley is reiterating her calls for Biden to take a mental competency test in the wake of a special counsel report that described the 81-year-old president’s memory as “hazy,” “fuzzy,” and “poor.” Haley said in a statement Thursday that, “Joe Biden should take a mental competency test immediately, and it should be shared with the public.” Her call came after Special Counsel Robert Hur announced he wouldn’t prosecute Biden, despite finding that the president “willfully” retained classified information, posing “serious risks to national security.”
