On February 25, headlines were rife with Donald Trump’s huge twenty-point victory over Nikki Haley in Haley’s home state of South Carolina. Haley’s candidacy was therefore doomed—as if it hadn’t been before—and Trump was officially the Republican nominee-in-waiting. As a result, the Koch brothers, part of a contingent of smart money donors that were desperate to prevent Trump from leading the party to another defeat, grudgingly suspended their support.
Haley May Have Lost, But So Did Trump
Haley May Have Lost, But So Did Trump
Haley May Have Lost, But So Did Trump
On February 25, headlines were rife with Donald Trump’s huge twenty-point victory over Nikki Haley in Haley’s home state of South Carolina. Haley’s candidacy was therefore doomed—as if it hadn’t been before—and Trump was officially the Republican nominee-in-waiting. As a result, the Koch brothers, part of a contingent of smart money donors that were desperate to prevent Trump from leading the party to another defeat, grudgingly suspended their support.