Haley narrows gap in New Hampshire poll, trailing Trump by 20 points
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- January 09, 2024
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GOP presidential candidate Nikki Haley trimmed the gap between her and former President Trump in New Hampshire in a recent survey, though pollsters noted she still has a ways to go. In the USA TODAY/Boston Globe/Suffolk University poll, , Haley trailed Trump by 20 points in the Granite State, garnering about 26 percent of the likely GOP primary vote while Trump had the backing of 46 percent.
The former president’s lead remains significant among the primary candidates, but it is a dip from USA Today’s polling in October, when he held a 30 point lead over Haley. Since October, the former president support dropped by 3 points while Haley, the former governor of South Carolina, gained 7 points, pollsters noted.
Despite Haley’s surge in the first in the nation primary state, support has dropped for rivals Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and biotech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, who garnered 8 percent and 2 percent of the vote, respectively. This is a drop of 2 percentage points for DeSantis since October, when he polled in at 10 percent, and follows a series of other surveys showing dwindling support for the Florida governor as Haley surpasses his second place spot in several polls.
Meanwhile, former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie’s primary backing in New Hampshire did increase by six points from October, with the latest poll showing him at 12 percent. The poll comes with nearly two weeks to go before New Hampshire holds its primary on Jan. 23, just over a week after Iowa holds its caucuses.
In a , also released Tuesday, Haley with the former president to 7 points, after she increased support by 12 percentage points since the poll was taken in November. The Hill/Decision Desk’s of New Hampshire shows Trump with a 11.9 percent lead over Haley in the Granite State — 41.6 percent to 29.7 percent.
Christie has about 10.9 percent support, while DeSantis shows 7.4 percent and Ramaswamy has 4.9 percent. New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu (R) Haley last month, arguing she will get the Republican Party “back on track.” The USA TODAY/Boston Globe/Suffolk University poll was conducted between Jan. 3 and Jan.
7 among 1,000 New Hampshire voters. The margin of error is plus or minus 3.1 percentage points..