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A political spending group backed by conservative billionaire Charles Koch said it would stop funding Nikki Haley’s presidential campaign, in a blow to Donald Trump’s main Republican rival after she suffered a defeat in the South Carolina primary on Saturday.
The move by Americans for Prosperity Action is a signal that Haley’s support among top Republican Wall Street and corporate donors — which has helped sustain her White House bid — is starting to fade as Trump’s victory in the Republican nomination contest appears assured.
But even as it stopped funding Haley’s run, AFP Action did not shift to backing Trump, suggesting that the group may remain on the sidelines of the presidential race.
Emily Seidel, a senior adviser to AFP Action, said on Sunday that while her organisation continued to “endorse” Haley for president, it would “focus our resources where we can make the difference”, pointing to races for the US Congress.
Seidel said she expected Trump to lose the November general election and would damage the party’s “brand”, hurting other conservative candidates.
“If Donald Trump is at the top of the Republican ticket, the risk of one-party rule by a Democratic Party captured by the Progressive Left is severe and would do irreparable damage to the country,” Seidel wrote.
At the start of February, the Haley campaign had about $13mn on hand, which was about how much she spent in January, according to federal filings released this week. She has vowed to press ahead with her White House bid until at least the Super Tuesday contests in a number of states in early March, which will award a big chunk of delegates to the Republican convention.
Haley has campaigned as a traditional mainstream Republican, with hawkish positions on national security and staunch fiscal conservatism. Lately she has been blasting Trump for his temperament and the “chaos” he has brought to US politics.
But while she has won over votes from college-educated, moderate and centre-right suburban voters, she has failed to win over the Republican base, which remains captured by Trump, his populist economics and his isolationism on foreign policy.
The Haley campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the AFP Action statement.
The Koch network has been a deep source of funding for Republican candidates since the Barack Obama era, even though it is no longer as influential as it used to be.
One of AFP Action’s main goals will be to help Republicans win control of the US Senate, which they lost in 2020 and failed to win back in 2022 after Trump-backed candidates were defeated in a number of key races.
Seidel said her group had already endorsed candidates in four competitive races in Nevada, Montana, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin and would soon be doing the same in Ohio and Michigan.
“This election will be decided by swing voters. And Joe Biden leads Donald Trump 2 to 1 amongst independents,” she said. “The most important — and hardest — thing we may need to do is convince millions of voters who will never cast a ballot for Donald Trump to vote for Republican candidates for Senate and House who will advance our shared principles.”
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