Haley could overtake Trump in New Hampshire after Christie’s ‘game-changer’ exit

Nikki Haley during her televised debate in Des Moines, Iowa
A substantial number of Chris Christie's voters may now switch allegiance to Nikki Haley in the upcoming primary - AP Photo/Andrew Harnik

Nikki Haley could overtake Donald Trump in the New Hampshire primary following Chris Christie’s “game changer” exit from the race.

The former South Carolina governor is closing on Mr Trump in the second primary, trailing by around seven points in polls taken before Mr Christie dropped out on Wednesday, declaring he could not “see a path” to the White House.

If Ms Haley was to absorb all of Mr Christie’s votes, which experts said was likely, her campaign could jump 12 points, putting her ahead of Mr Trump.

Republicans called Mr Christie’s decision a “game changer” that could hinder Mr Trump’s ability to “run a campaign of attrition”.

However, Mr Christie himself was caught on a hot microphone at the event where he announced the end of his campaign telling allies Ms Haley was going to “get smoked” by Mr Trump in the primary.

“She’s not up to this,” he said during a private conversation that appeared to be inadvertently broadcast online, before being deleted, ahead of his town hall in Windham, New Hampshire.

On Wednesday night, Ms Haley and Mr DeSantis faced off in a televised debate from Iowa, which will caucus for its preferred Republican nominee on Monday.

The pair exchanged barbs at the event in Des Moines, where Ms Haley said Mr DeSantis had wasted the estimated $150m he has spent on his campaign.

The Florida governor hit back, arguing her presidency would be no different to a second term by Joe Biden.

“We don’t need a candidate who is going to look down on middle America. We’ve had enough of that,” he said, adding that she had “got this problem with ballistic podiatry…shooting herself in the foot.”

Mr DeSantis had hoped to revive his ailing campaign in Iowa, which is traditionally a socially conservative state, but appears not to have overtaken Mr Trump’s lead of more than 20 points in local polls.

The exit of Mr Christie from the race makes it probable that Ms Haley will become the rallying candidate for Republicans who oppose Mr Trump.

Eric Levine, a fundraiser for Ms Haley’s campaign in New York, told The Telegraph that he believed Mr DeSantis would drop out of the primary after the Iowa caucus, leaving Ms Haley a clear run against the former president.

“I think Monday is the end of the DeSantis campaign,” he said. “Then it’s just Haley versus Trump. I think she has a legitimate shot at winning New Hampshire, and with that momentum, I think she can win South Carolina.”

Bill Boyd, a New Hampshire state representative, told NBC: “There’s no question: Haley benefits. What was thought [of] as a President Trump slam dunk here in New Hampshire, is now a toss-up.”

Ms Haley told voters in Ankeny, Iowa, on Thursday that she was the only candidate who could beat Mr Biden by a large enough margin to secure a significant mandate for change in Washington.

“If you go into DC with a double-digit win, that’s a mandate to stop the wasteful spending and get our economy back on track,” she said.

Republican presidential candidate Chris Christie announces he is dropping out of the race during a town hall campaign event
Chris Christie is the latest candidate to drop out ahead of this year's election - AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty

Mr Trump chose not to attend the debate, which he described as a “losers bracket debate”, and instead appeared at a Fox News town hall event nearby.

He told an audience of around 500 Republicans that he has already chosen his running mate for 2024 - but refused to say who he had picked.

The former president also doubled down on his comments that he would become a “dictator…for one day” to fix a migrant crisis at the Mexican border if he was re-elected in November.