The latest on the 2024 presidential race

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John King
'This is his party': John King breaks down Trump's win in Nevada caucuses
01:36 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

Our live coverage has ended. Read more about the Nevada caucuses and the latest news from the campaign trail in the posts below.

41 Posts

Trump rails against special counsel decision not to recommend charges for Biden

Former President Donald Trump on Friday railed against a special counsel’s decision not to recommend charges against President Joe Biden over his handling of classified documents while attacking the president’s mental state.

Trump, who is facing charges related to mishandling of classified documents, called it a “sick and corrupt two-tiered system of justice.”?

In a report released Thursday, Special Counsel Robert Hur did not recommend charges against Biden over his handling of classified documents. In his explanation for not recommending prosecution, Hur described the president as a “well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory.”

Trump, addressing a National Rifle Association rally in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, said Biden did “a lot” of the activity related to retaining documents “when he was at a very young age.”

“He was mentally a little better than he is right now,” he continued, addressing Biden’s mental acuity, something he did not immediately seize on?yesterday?in the wake of the report.

The former president also said Biden had made recovery of classified documents by investigators “almost impossible,” later claiming that he cooperated with investigators more than Biden did.

However, Hur made clear in his report how different Biden’s and Trump’s classified information cases are — namely, that Biden cooperated with investigators while Trump did not.

Biden cries foul over negative portrayal, but officials say this is what happens with special counsels?

Special Counsel Robert Hur’s report on President Joe Biden’s mishandling of classified information has reignited controversy over special counsels and their investigative reports, which are designed to publicly disclose findings — including negative ones — even if prosecutors are declining to bring charges.?

Attorney General Merrick Garland received Hur’s final report on February 5, according to the Justice Department, and immediately was confronted with how to handle the special counsel’s harsh assessment of the president’s conduct, including language saying that a jury could see him as an “elderly man with a poor memory.”?

The closing of the investigation will soon also present the Justice Department and the White House with a new decision on what to do about any audio recordings of the president’s interview last October with the Special Counsel and his 2017 discussions with his ghostwriter, as well as other materials from the investigation.

Special counsels, of course, have been full of controversy dating back decades, regardless of whether they lead to an indictment, from Ken Starr’s investigation of former President Bill Clinton to Robert Mueller’s probe into former President Donald Trump — and now Jack Smith’s twin indictments of the former president.?

Garland and other top Justice Department officials had the option to try to remove some of the characterizations in Hur’s report that the White House says were gratuitous and false.?

But the repercussions of doing so are clear: Garland would have to report to Congress the information he was removing, which would immediately undermine the independence of the investigation and fuel more allegations of partisanship.?

Trump mocks Biden for mistakenly calling president of Egypt the president of Mexico

Former President Donald Trump mocked Joe Biden after the president mistakenly called Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi the president of Mexico at a news conference on Thursday.?

Trump?posted a map?on Truth Social on Friday that labels Egypt as Mexico with the words, “Source: Joe Biden.” He also?posted the clip?where Biden calls el-Sisi the president of Mexico.?

Biden made the mistake as he dismissed criticisms of memory lapses outlined in special counsel Robert Hur’s searing report. Hur did not recommend charges against Biden over his handling of classified documents.?

Fact check: Biden makes some false claims about his handling of classified information

President Joe Biden gave a press conference Thursday night after the release of a?report?from special counsel Robert Hur, who announced that Biden would not face charges over his handling of classified information from prior to his presidency.

Biden was?combative, forcefully rejecting Hur’s claims that he has a poor memory. But the president was also repeatedly inaccurate, making three claims that were clearly contradicted by Hur’s report.

Here is a fact check of some of the claims.

Where the classified materials were stored: Biden sought to contrast his handling of classified material with that of former President Donald Trump, who faces?felony charges for willfully retaining classified documents. (Hur?agreed that there were major distinctions between the two cases.) But while Biden correctly noted that the documents were in a private home that is very different from the Mar-a-Lago social club where Trump lives, Biden embellished his argument with a false claim.

Biden said: “All the stuff that was in my home was in filing cabinets that were either locked or able to be?locked.”

The classification level of documents Biden had in his possession: Biden claimed of the documents he possessed: “None of it was high classified. It didn’t have any of that red stuff on it, you know what I mean, around the corners? None of that.”

See more fact checks on Biden’s comments about the special counsel’s report.

White House explains why Biden talked to special counsel the day after Israel attacks

The White House defended President Joe Biden’s decision to speak to special counsel Robert Hur the day after the October 7 terrorist attacks in Israel, despite the Biden team’s repeated references to the president being distracted by world events during his interview.?

He said that Hur told Biden he wanted him to “try to recall to the best of your abilities.”?

He said that Biden “wanted to make sure he had everything he needed, and he didn’t want to throw up roadblocks” which is why he agreed to move forward with the interview.

The White House also didn’t rule out the possibility of releasing the transcript of the interviews, with the caveat that any classified information would have to be redacted, according to Sams.

Harris forcefully defends Biden and questions special counsel's integrity in wake of documents report

US?Vice President Kamala Harris speaks during a 'First In The Nation' campaign rally at South Carolina State University on February 2 in Orangeburg, South Carolina.

Vice President Kamala Harris forcefully defended President Joe Biden’s mental acuity on Friday and lambasted special counsel Robert Hur’s report as politically motivated.

Harris recounted in detail the experience serving alongside Biden in the aftermath of the October 7 Hamas attacks on Israel, noting that she was in “almost every meeting” with him and his national security team in the days that followed. Biden sat for interviews with Hur on October 8 and 9.?

“He was in front of it all coordinating and directing leaders who are in charge of America’s national security, not to mention our allies around the globe,” the vice president said.

She also slammed Hur’s characterization of Biden’s mental fitness and questioned the conservative special counsel’s integrity.

“The way that the president’s demeanor in that report was characterized could not be more wrong on the facts and clearly politically motivated, gratuitous. And so I will say that when it comes to the role and responsibility of a prosecutor in a situation like that, we should expect that there would be a higher level of integrity of what we saw,” she said.?

Likely front-runner for RNC chair parroted Trump’s 2020 election lies

Former President Donald Trump takes the stage with NCGOP Chairman Michael Whatley after being announced at the NCGOP state convention on June 5, 2021 in Greenville, North Carolina.?

Former President Donald Trump and his allies are pushing to replace the chair of the Republican National Committee (RNC) with North Carolina’s party leader who promoted 2020 presidential election lies and supported using the courts to overturn the results.

Michael Whatley, the chair of the North Carolina Republican Party, shared false claims that Republican observers were prevented from accessing polling locations and repeatedly said Democratic cities in swing states were engaged in “massive fraud,” a CNN KFile review of Whatley’s comments following the election found.?

Following the riot at the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, Whatley condemned those who broke into the Capitol building, but said the Republican Party as “a whole” was not complicit and suggested rioters were not “Republican voters.”

Whatley, who has since acknowledged Joe Biden is the country’s legitimate president, currently serves as general counsel at the RNC overseeing litigation and what the organization calls its “election integrity” efforts.

His elevation to RNC chair could give Trump a loyalist more willing to devote resources to pursue future voter fraud claims in court should they arise. One reason why Trump soured on Ronna McDaniel, the current chair, was his perception she should have done more to fight for his candidacy in 2020, CNN reported.

Like many Republicans, Whatley publicly backed Trump’s voter fraud claims on multiple occasions following the 2020 election.

Dive deeper into what Whatley has said and the state of the RNC.

The special counsel report on Biden should be a "wake-up call" for Democrats and Republicans, Haley says?

GOP presidential candidate Nikki Haley said special counsel Robert Hur’s report that did not charge President Biden with a crime, but painted a picture of apparent lapses in memory from the president who failed to properly protect highly sensitive classified information, should be a “wake-up call” for both Democrats and Republicans.?

Haley also took aim at former President Donald Trump saying, that he “has his own mental deficiencies, is prone to temper tantrums and wild rants, and confuses countries and who was in charge of Capitol security on January 6th.”

“I have long said: the first party to retire its 80-year-old candidate will win the White House. Democrats appear on their way to doing just that. Trump runs about even with the enfeebled Biden; he would get crushed by a Democrat with a pulse,” Haley added.

AI, deepfakes, disinformation: Here are some 2024 election threats that the White House is preparing for

In this photo from the White House, staff are seen seated in a part of the newly renovated White House Situation Room.

The Biden House held an election security drill in December — the first such meeting in the three years of this administration — where senior national security officials faced a pair of stark, simulated scenarios that tested the limits of any federal response to election-related chaos, four people familiar with the meeting told CNN.

Questions they faced: What if Chinese operatives created a fake AI-generated video showing a Senate candidate destroying ballots??And how should federal agencies respond if violence erupts at polling stations on Election Day?

For nearly an hour, the No. 2 officials?at the FBI, CIA and departments of Homeland Security and Justice wrestled with how to respond to the deepfake video, including whether and how to notify the public about the activity if they weren’t sure that China was behind it, the sources told CNN.

Where federal response stands: When it comes to a coordinated federal response to things like rampant disinformation, deepfakes and the harassment of election officials, “We’re all f—king tied up in knots,” said one US official familiar with the election security drill.

The participants opted for state election officials, and not the federal government, to lead any public messaging to counter disinformation spread by the fake video in their jurisdictions, two of the sources said.?Officials also discussed options for notifying Congress.

As for violence at the polls, the federal officials decided not to dispatch federal agents to support local police because they did not have the jurisdiction to do so.

Read more about CNN’s exclusive story on 2024 election threats.

CNN’s Evan Perez, Natasha Bertrand, Donie O’Sullivan and Katie Bo Lillis contributed to this report.

DNC alleges RFK Jr. campaign illegally coordinated with outside group on signature gathering operation

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. speaks during a campaign rally at Legends Event Center on December 20, 2023 in Phoenix, Arizona.

The Democratic National Committee filed an FEC complaint against Robert Kennedy Jr.’s presidential campaign on Friday, alleging illegal coordination with an outside group supporting his White House bid.

In a letter to the FEC, the DNC wrote that the group backing Kennedy, American Values 2024, “has begun making, and Team Kennedy accepting, in-kind contributions to assist Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s candidacy in violation of federal law.”

The complaint specifically alleges that the group illegally contributed to Kennedy Jr.’s signature-gathering efforts, which are necessary for Kennedy to qualify for several state’s presidential ballots as an independent candidate.

Registered as a hybrid PAC, with the ability to solicit unlimited contributions, American Values 2024 is prohibited from coordinating directly with Kennedy’s presidential campaign. But the complaint argues that coordination is required for the ballot access efforts by American Values and Team Kennedy, and thereby the group’s support runs afoul of campaign finance laws.?

The co-chair of American Values 2024, Tony Lyons, said in a statement to CNN that the PAC’s ballot access operation has complied with FEC laws labeled the filing as a “desperate DNC tactic,” adding the party wants “to deny millions of people their basic constitutional voting rights.”

In December, American Values announced plans to gather signatures on behalf of Kennedy in 10 states, targeting states where additional support to the campaign may be useful based on the number of signatures needed to qualify and the complexity of the state’s election laws.?

Earlier this month, the PAC announced plans to gather signatures in an additional four states, and said signature gathering has already begun in Michigan, Arizona and Georgia. In the complaint, the DNC alleges the PAC “must coordinate” with the Kennedy campaign to successfully operate its supplemental signature-gathering operation.??

CNN has reached out to the Kennedy campaign for comment.?

This post has been updated with a response from American Values 2024.

Rep. Rosendale?announces Senate bid in Montana, setting up contentious GOP primary

As the presidential race continues to shape up, key congressional races are also coming into focus.

GOP Rep. Matt Rosendale announced Friday that he had filed to run for the Senate in Montana,?setting up a contentious primary?against national Republicans’ preferred pick to take on vulnerable Democratic Sen. Jon Tester.

His candidacy goes against Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and the Senate GOP’s campaign arm, who are both supporting Republican candidate Tim Sheehy to challenge Democratic Sen. Jon Tester in what is seen as a critical race for the GOP’s effort to flip the Senate.?

House Speaker Mike Johnson reversed course and decided not to endorse Rosendale after receiving swift blowback.?

There’s concern among Republicans that if Rosendale — a hard right Republican who has lost statewide before — wins the primary, that they will be far less likely to win the seat in November.

These are the key 2024 presidential primary dates coming up next

Republican presidential candidates Donald Trump and Nikki Haley are vying to take on President Joe Biden in November 2024. But first, they’re competing in the GOP primaries and caucuses, which began in January, to emerge as the party’s nominee.

The Nevada primary election took place Tuesday while the Nevada Republican Party-run caucuses were held Thursday night.

Here’s a look at upcoming key primary dates:

February:

  • February 24: South Carolina Republican presidential primary election
  • February 27: Michigan Democratic presidential primary election

March:

  • March 2: Idaho Republican caucuses and Missouri Republican caucuses
  • March 3: Washington, DC, Republican presidential primary
  • March 4: North Dakota Republican presidential caucuses
  • March 5: Super Tuesday —?states and territories holding elections include?Alabama, Alaska Republican presidential primary, American Samoa Democratic presidential caucuses, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Iowa Democratic presidential preference, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, Utah Democratic presidential primary and Republican presidential caucuses, Vermont and Virginia.
  • March 12: Some primary contests on this day include Georgia, Hawaii Republican presidential caucuses, Mississippi and Washington.
  • March 19: States holding elections include Arizona, Florida Republican presidential primary, Illinois, Kansas and Ohio.

Access the full 2024 election calendar.

Trump flexes his dominance of Nevada GOP but cracks are forming in the state ahead of November's election

Former President Donald Trump attends a Nevada caucus party in Las Vegas on Thursday night.

Varlin Higbee traveled more than two hours from his Lincoln County, Nevada, home to see?Donald Trump?in person last month, but when he arrived at the former president’s Las Vegas rally, he was stopped at the door.

Despite carrying a VIP invite from the Trump campaign, Higbee, the chair of his county commission, was barred from entrance by state party members for previously supporting one of the former president’s Republican primary rivals.

“They said, ‘Did you endorse (Florida Gov. Ron) DeSantis?’” Higbee told CNN. “And I said, ‘I sure did because of this sh*t right now.’”

To some longtime Nevada?Republicans who witnessed Higbee get turned away or caught wind of it, the episode was illustrative of a state party that has crossed many lines in its allegiance to the former president. They warn it could alienate the kind of voters they’ll need to win this?crucial general election battleground.

Trump narrowly lost Nevada in 2016 and 2020 by nearly identical narrow margins – about 2.5 percentage points. Going into the fall, it’s expected to be hotly contested once again in what is likely to be a rematch between Trump and President Joe Biden.

Trump’s supremacy?over the Nevada Republican Party was on full display this week. Trump won the state’s caucuses?and all of its delegates on Thursday night, running essentially unopposed. His remaining opponent in the race, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, instead opted to participate in the state-run?Republican primary, held two days prior – a confusing arrangement orchestrated by Trump loyalists in the state GOP.

Here’s more on where things stand in Nevada.

Analysis: Biden tried to lay to rest age concerns, but yesterday's news conference may have exacerbated them?

President Joe Biden speaks from the White House on Thursday night.

A probe that spared President?Joe Biden?from criminal charges paradoxically dealt him a threatening political blow.

Special counsel Robert Hur’s?report released Thursday?on Biden’s handling of classified documents effectively ended the matter. But his assertions that Biden was elderly and forgetful ignited a political firestorm that cut directly to the heart of the president’s chief vulnerability in the 2024 election.

The White House knew it had a huge political problem on its hands.

After hours of Republican claims that the report showed he wasn’t capable of serving as president, Biden appeared at a hastily scheduled news conference Thursday evening, apparently seeking to turn the page on what turned into a disastrous day.

Biden appeared?fired up and passionate. But at the same time, his angry demeanor and an event which appeared to quickly spin out of his control, with reporters shouting questions as he struggled to interrupt, may have ended up exacerbating the very questions about his age that it was meant to dispel.

When CNN’s MJ Lee pointed out that many voters have questions about his age, Biden pointed his finger and forcibly said,?“That’s your judgment.”

The press event also raised new questions about his sharpness in a week in which he has twice confused the names of a serving and recent European leader with those with whom he interacted in the 1980s. At one point in his Thursday night appearance, Biden was referring to the president of Egypt in a comment about the Middle East crisis but mistakenly said “the president of Mexico.”?

Read more about yesterday’s event and its impact.

Trump met with former House Speaker McCarthy backstage before Nevada speech

Former President Donald Trump takes the stage at his Nevada caucus party in Las Vegas on Thursday night.

Former House Kevin Speaker Kevin McCarthy attended former President Donald Trump’s watch party in Las Vegas Thursday night, and told reporters they spoke backstage before Trump delivered his victory speech.

McCarthy told reporters he and Trump discussed the 2024 election, the Supreme Court arguments regarding whether to remove the former president from Colorado’s presidential ballot, and special counsel Robert Hur’s report on President Joe Biden’s handling of classified documents.

Asked about Trump’s potential vice presidential picks, and specifically whether House Conference Chair Elise Stefanik or South Carolina Rep. Nancy Mace have a shot, he attacked Mace as someone who struggled to even get reelected to the House.

“You watch how she’s failed for the low country. She flip flops every single day. She doesn’t have a principal. I just — if you listen to her district they have a real concern with her even being reelected,” he said.

The ousted former House speaker said he and Trump did not discuss potential changes at the?Republican National Committee, nor the potential that McCarthy might serve as its next chairman, adding that he is not open to taking that role.?

Analysis: How Donald Trump had his best day of 2024 so far

Former President Donald Trump greets supporters at his caucus night watch party at the Treasure Island Hotel & Casino on February 8, in Las Vegas, Nevada.?

Donald Trump had his best day of 2024 so far because of a one-two-three combo that should have him feeling solid about his political future, at least for a moment.

Here are the details:

  • A political gift: An independent special counsel poured kerosene on concerns about?Joe?Biden’s age with pointed language about?his?poor memory?after concluding?the president had willfully mishandled?classified documents –?and that?his failing memory makes him impossible to convict. Biden was on defense at a hastily-called White House news conference. “My memory is fine,” Biden said.
  • A glide path to the Republican nomination: Trump romped in?the?Nevada and?US Virgin Island caucuses Thursday night, continuing?his?unbeaten streak and making?Nikki Haley’s campaign feel futile.
  • A possible win with SCOTUS: Trump appears poised for a win at the Supreme Court. Justices expressed deep skepticism that Colorado could declare him an insurrectionist and bar him from their election ballots.

Read more on Trump’s great day.

Trump thanks Nevada Republicans after being projected caucuses winner

Former President Donald Trump thanked Nevada Republicans at his campaign’s watch party in Las Vegas after he was projected the winner of the Nevada caucuses.

His brief remarks did not weigh in on special counsel Robert Hur’s decision to not recommend charges against President Joe Biden over the leader’s handling of classified documents.??

Trump described watching Supreme Court arguments after the nation’s highest court signaled?it was poised to back Trump and fend off a challenge to his eligibility to appear on Colorado’s ballot.

Trump also mocked GOP presidential rival Nikki Haley’s loss in Nevada’s non-binding Republican primary on Tuesday to “none of these candidates.”

“And last night, you know what happened last night, right? ‘None of the above.’ So I’d like to congratulate ‘none of the above.’ I was one of those ‘none-of-ever aboves.’ I was one of them,” Trump said.

Trump dined with casino magnate's widow in Las Vegas on Thursday

Former President Donald Trump dined with Miriam Adelson,?widow to the late casino magnate and billionaire Sheldon Adelson,?in Las Vegas on Thursday night.

The dinner took place shortly before Trump attended his caucus night watch party, Trump’s senior adviser Chris LaCivita told reporters.?

LaCivita and Trump adviser Susie Wiles also attended the dinner, he said.

Adelson has yet to endorse a candidate for 2024. She met separately with Trump and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley in November on the sidelines of the Republican Jewish Coalition.?

Adelson has known Haley for years and has previously contributed to causes on her behalf. Adelson’s late husband, meanwhile,?was?the largest donor to Trump’s 2016 campaign.?

Analysis: Haley's voters could throw a wrench in Trump's general election plan

As the South Carolina Republican primary approaches, the evidence is growing that?Nikki Haley’s?coalition is almost certainly not large enough to deny?Donald Trump?the GOP presidential nomination.

But evidence is also accumulating that her coalition is more than large enough to deny Trump the White House in a general election if her voters remain as alienated from him as they now say they are.

The support for Haley in the early GOP contests has mapped, probably more precisely than ever before, the segments of the Republican electorate most deeply disaffected with Trump.

In a possible rematch with Trump this fall,?President Joe Biden?will likely need to attract crossover support from a significant share of those ordinarily Republican-leaning voters to overcome?the towering discontent evident in polls?about his own performance.

Read more about how?Haley’s voters could impact Biden’s re-election here.

Everything to know about delegates and how the GOP selects its presidential nominee

People wait in line to enter a caucus site at Katherine Dunn Elementary School in Sparks, Nevada, on February 8.

Winning individual primaries and caucuses is just one step in the long path to winning a party’s presidential nomination.

How does the Republican Party pick a presidential candidate??Both parties hold conventions in the summer where delegates technically select the nominee. The process and rules are different for each party, but the primaries are about winning enough delegates to secure the nomination. There are different kinds of nominating contests and different kinds of delegates in a?calendar?that stretches from January to June, so keeping track of the delegate math can get complicated.

What is a delegate??Performing well in primaries and caucuses equals delegates, and the larger goal is amassing the magic number of delegates to secure a nomination.

How many delegates are there??Whoever wins the GOP nomination needs to win at least 1,215 out of 2,429 delegates awarded as part of the primary process. In years without an incumbent, like Republicans are experiencing in 2024, the winner frequently does not hit the magic number until May or even June. In 2016, in his first of three White House runs,?Donald Trump hit the magic number?on May 26.

What’s different about Nevada: The Silver State held both a state-run primary election and Nevada Republican Party-run caucuses. The parallel contests are the result of a 2021 Nevada state law that requires a primary if more than one candidate from a party files. But, candidates who competed in the state-run primary were not allowed to participate in the caucuses, where the state GOP awarded delegates.

Keep reading here about how Republicans select their nominee

Here's how many delegates Trump has won in Nevada and beyond

Former President Donald Trump speaks during a campaign event in Las Vegas on January 27.

Former President Donald Trump is in the lead in CNN’s latest GOP delegate estimate from the Nevada party-run caucuses:

  • Donald Trump: 24
  • Unallocated: 2

Here’s how many delegates candidates have won in the primary race so far:??

  • Donald Trump: 61
  • Nikki Haley: 17
  • Ron DeSantis: 9
  • Vivek Ramaswamy: 3

Remember: Whoever wins the GOP nomination needs to win at least 1,215 out of 2,429 delegates awarded as part of the primary process.?DeSantis and Ramaswamy have dropped out of the race.

Learn more about the GOP presidential nomination and delegates.??

The post was updated with the latest delegate tally as of 1:00 a.m. ET Friday.

CNN Projection: Trump will win Nevada's GOP caucuses

Former President Donald Trump speaks at a campaign rally in Reno in December 2023.

Former President Donald Trump will win Nevada’s GOP caucuses, CNN projects.

The victory was effectively guaranteed when his lone remaining well-known rival, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, chose not to compete for the state’s delegates.

The former president has won all three Republican contests so far — adding the Silver State to Iowa and New Hampshire — as he moves closer to the GOP’s 2024 presidential nomination.

Thursday’s caucuses in?Nevada came two days after the state held primaries where President Joe Biden dominated the Democratic contest and “none of these candidates” finished first for Republicans, ahead of Haley.

This post has been updated with additional information about Trump’s projected victory.

Stefanik says if she were Trump's vice president she would’ve rejected electoral votes on January 6

Rep. Elise Stefanik speaks at a press conference in Washington, DC, on February 6.?

House GOP Conference Chair Elise Stefanik?said she would have rejected electoral votes on January 6, 2021,?had she been President Donald Trump’s?vice president.

“I would not have done what Mike Pence did. I don’t think that was the right approach,” Stefanik told CNN’s Kaitlan Collins, answering a question about what she would have done on January 6.

Trump criticized Pence for certifying the 2020 presidential election for Joe?Biden.

Some Republican?lawmakers?and strategists?believe Stefanik,?one of the former president’s most loyal allies on Capitol Hill,?has been jockeying to become Trump’s pick for vice president after a series of moves that appear designed to please the former president.

Some takeaways from the New York special election debate

In this screengrab from video, candidates for New York's 3rd congressional district Mazi Pilip and Tom Suozzi square off at a town hall-style debate hosted by News 12’s Rich Barrabi just days before the special election for George Santos’ vacant House seat on February 8.

Democratic former Rep. Tom Suozzi and Republican Nassau County legislator Mazi Melesa Pilip squared off Thursday night in the first and only debate of their race to replace disgraced former Rep. George Santos — a heated affair that underscored the contest’s national stakes.

Santos himself was largely an afterthought as issues such as immigration and abortion – which have roiled New York’s 3rd Congressional District along with the rest of the country – dominated the debate.

The pair, along with News 12 anchor Rich Barrabi and the town hall-style audience, steered clear of the Santos fiasco that gripped the district for the better part of last year.

Here are the main takeaways:

Immigration takes center stage: Pilip accused Suozzi of “opening the border” and demanded that he “own” the issue, pointing to his past criticism of Immigration and Customs Enforcement and support for sanctuary cities.

Suozzi, a moderate Democrat and former member of the bipartisan Problem Solvers Caucus, rejected the charge, accusing Pilip of misleading the public about his record – which included a bipartisan immigration reform attempt with former GOP Rep. Peter King – and deriding her as a big talker with no coherent plan to fix the problem.

Suozzi touts his brand: Suozzi has held office on Long Island for most of the three decades since he was first elected mayor of Glen Cove, on Long Island’s North Shore, in 1993. During the debate, he frequently questioned Pilip’s qualifications and ability to make legislation move on Capitol Hill while also leaning on his well-honed brand to fend off a flurry of attacks from Pilip, who has sought to paint him as a leftist.

Pilip at times became frustrated, and?at one point, during an exchange over abortion, took a step toward Suozzi’s lectern. The Democrat responded with a deep-cut New York political reference – joking that she was channeling former Senate candidate Rick Lazio, who infamously infringed on then-candidate Hillary Clinton’s turf during a 2000 campaign debate.

Questions about abortion: Another fiery exchange between the candidates came on the issue of abortion. Pilip accused Suozzi of lying about her stance and Suozzi pushed her to answer whether she’d vote to codify abortion rights protections.

What about George?: Pilip, who had initially endorsed Santos and later called for his resignation, acknowledged that the Santos scandal was “frustrating” and said that the former congressman “lied to all of us.” She swore to the accuracy of her resume, while Suozzi insisted he’s an “open book” and has been “examined over and over again.”

Suozzi, however, used the opportunity to criticize Pilip for not participating in more debates, as this was their first, arguing that debates provide voters a chance to “fully vet the candidates and understand what they stand for, clear as day.”

Read more on the special election debate here.

Voting is now over in the Nevada Republican caucuses

The final opportunity to vote has now passed as Nevada wraps up its Republican caucuses on Thursday.

  • Doors opened at 5:00 p.m. local time (8:00 p.m. ET) and the caucuses convened at 6:00 p.m. local time (9:00 p.m. ET).
  • Drop-in voting just closed at 7:30 p.m. local time (10:30 p.m. ET).

Nevada is the third state to hold caucuses in the Republican Party’s nominating schedule. In the past, Nevada was the last of the four early states to hold caucuses in the GOP primary schedule. This year it jumped ahead of South Carolina’s nominating contest.?

Nevada also held a state-run Republican primary on Tuesday due to a 2021 state law that requires a primary election be held if more than one candidate from a party files. However, candidates who competed in the state-run primary — like Nikki Haley — were not allowed to participate in the caucuses or receive delegates.

Thursday’s caucuses are the only place where Republican delegates will be awarded.

Haley slams Biden and Trump "arrogance" in classified document handling cases

GOP presidential candidate Nikki Haley has slammed both President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump, both of whom were accused of mishandling classified documents.

The comments come in response to a report from special counsel Robert Hur who found Biden willfully retained and disclosed classified military and national security information.

Trump, Haley’s rival and the frontrunner to win the Republican presidential nomination, faces his own investigation into the mishandling of classified documents.

Haley said she believes Biden and Trump knowingly mishandled classified documents, which she attributed to “arrogance,” while also calling the investigation into Biden partisan.

Haley took the opportunity to reiterate her calls for a new generation of leadership after Hur questioned Biden’s memory and mental acuity in his report, which she called “unbelievably disturbing” and “actually dangerous.” She later questioned Trump’s mental sharpness, pointing to Trump previously confusing Haley with former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

The state of the GOP race: The former South Carolina governor has outlasted all of Trump’s primary?challengers and continues to post strong fundraising numbers, but her campaign faces a daunting, if not impossible, path to winning the GOP presidential nomination. Trump continues to dominate in polls of upcoming primary states, and Republicans who have rallied around the former president are growing more insistent in their calls for her to drop out.

Why Nikki Haley is not participating in the Nevada GOP caucuses

Nikki Haley speaks during a campaign event on February 7, 2024 in Los Angeles, California.?

Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley is not participating in the Nevada Republican caucuses Thursday, leaving her unable to pick up any delegates.

Nevada held a state-run Republican primary on Tuesday due to a 2021 state law that requires a primary if more than one candidate from a party files. However, the state Republican Party, led by supporters of former President Donald Trump, opted to hold caucuses.

The party also warned presidential candidates that they would not receive any delegates?if they filed to run in the primary. But some, including Haley, South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott and former Vice President Mike Pence?chose to do so anyway. All but Haley have dropped out of the race.

Meanwhile,?Trump, as well as Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum and Texas pastor Ryan Binkley filed to run in the caucuses.

The departure of all of those candidates besides Trump (aside from the little-known Binkley, who is still in the race) effectively cemented the former president’s victory?in the caucuses before either of the dueling contests were held.

CNN’s Ethan Cohen?and Molly English contributed reporting to this post.

A recap of the top headlines in a seismic day of US political news

The Supreme Court on February 8, 2024 in Washington, DC.

Former President Donald Trump faces no serious opposition in tonight’s Nevada Republican Party-run caucuses. He is expected to pick up all of the state’s delegates as he prepares for a rematch with President Joe Biden.

But both party frontrunners had to contend with other challenges earlier today.

Trump’s political fate faced judgment beyond the ballot box as the US Supreme Court heard arguments about whether his actions around the January 6, 2021, riot make him ineligible to appear on Colorado’s ballot.

Meanwhile, Biden forcefully criticized special counsel Robert Hur’s accusations in the wake of a more than 300-page report on his handling of classified documents. Though the president was not charged, Hur’s report painted a picture of a forgetful commander-in-chief who failed to properly protect highly sensitive classified information — a depiction that could hurt Biden politically.

Here are some key headlines to know from today’s US political news:

  • Conservatives suggest several ways to side with Trump:?Throughout the Supreme Court arguments, the court’s conservatives repeatedly questioned whether the insurrection ban was intended to apply to former presidents and whether the ban could be enforced without Congress first enacting a law. Others delved into more fundamental questions about whether courts removing a candidate from the ballot is democratic.
  • Jackson and liberals also had tough questions:?Even some of the liberal justices posed difficult questions to the lawyers representing Trump’s challengers. Notably, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, a Biden nominee, said that the 14th Amendment provision did not include the word “president,” even though it specifically listed other officials who would be covered, such as members of Congress. That is a central argument Trump’s attorneys have raised in the case.?
  • A painful report for Biden:?Hur laid out in detail how Biden mishandled classified materials, writing that FBI agents discovered materials from “the garage, offices, and basement den in Mr. Biden’s Wilmington, Delaware, home.” The materials included?classified documents, including some marked at the highest top secret/sensitive compartmented information level, related to military and foreign policy in Afghanistan, as well as notebooks containing Biden’s handwriting.
  • Hur says evidence didn’t support charging the president:?While the investigation revealed that Biden “willfully retained and disclosed classified materials” after leaving office, Hur’s report says his team concluded that the evidence didn’t support prosecuting the president. The primary reason for that determination was that nothing proved a willful intent by Biden to illegally hold onto classified information. The special counsel also raised Biden’s age and memory in explaining why he didn’t bring charges.

With polls showing a tight race, Biden wants the 2024 election to be a referendum on Trump

President Joe Biden?gave his clearest sign yet that his reelection strategy will hinge on making this fall’s vote a referendum on?Donald Trump.

As he traversed New York City for a series of fundraisers Wednesday, Biden labeled his predecessor — and likeliest rival this year — an “existential threat” who has wrestled the Republican Party into a stranglehold, intensifying his direct criticisms of the former president and offering one of the starkest windows yet into how he regards the stakes of November’s contest.

After spending the last year working to promote his record — and seeing little improvement in his approval ratings — Biden is now increasingly going after Trump, the Republican front-runner, as a threat to democracy and a danger to personal freedoms.

What polls show: A?CNN poll conducted by SSRS?shows Trump?narrowly ahead of Biden?in what’s shaping up to be a close contest nationally. The poll highlights voters’ conflicted feelings about the leading candidates, with a sizable minority expressing a desire for another option if Biden and Trump are the nominees.

Support for Trump runs deep in Haley's home state of South Carolina

Former President Donald Trump and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley square off in the South Carolina GOP presidential primary later this month.

But despite it being Haley’s home state, there are a lot of voters who say they are going to stand by Trump no matter what, echoing his false claims about rigged elections and bogus investigations. It’s one reason Trump consistently leads the primary polls.

Here’s what some of them had to say:

Joy Rendulic was hesitant when her husband first suggested a move to South Carolina. Then she left Erie, Pennsylvania, and bought an ice cream shop. The big move was in 2016. Nikki Haley was the governor then, and newcomer Rendulic was impressed, saying she was a “very good governor.”

Still, Trump won her vote for president that same year, again in 2020 and will once more when Trump and Haley square off in the South Carolina GOP presidential primary this month.

Asked about what happened in 2020, Rendulic said, “That was a mess. That was so illegal. Some improper cheating happening to the voting procedures.”

Billy Pierce is another piece of the Trump comeback puzzle. He has lived in Hartsville — about two hours inland from the South Carolina coast — all his 70 years except for a stint in the Navy.

Pierce sees President Joe Biden as too unwilling to stand up to the Democratic left and has fond memories of the pre-Covid economy during the Trump administration. He also said Trump is “going to fix the things I need him to fix,” listing the border as his top priority. But, Pierce is not an election denier, nor is he a fan of the former president’s toxic tone.

Read more about what South Carolina Republican voters are saying ahead of the primary election.

Biden has early cash edge as Trump’s legal bills mount, reports show

President Joe Biden?entered the election year with an early financial edge over?Donald Trump’s presidential campaign,?filings show?– a bright spot for an incumbent with low approval ratings girding for a bruising general election rematch with his 2020 foe.

Biden had nearly $46 million in cash on hand in his main campaign committee, compared with $33 million amassed by Trump, who is still working to dispatch his remaining major rival for the GOP nomination, former South Carolina Gov.?Nikki Haley.

But the reports underscore the challenges ahead for the president: Despite facing no real threats to his nomination, Biden has not built the cash reserves that would allow him to swamp Trump’s campaign, even as the former president faces?mounting legal woes?and Haley’s staying power in the race.

Trump’s available cash was more than double the $14.6 million in reserves held by Haley, according to Wednesday night filings with the Federal Election Commission.

Here are?some takeaways?from the new filings.

Haley says Tuesday's Nevada primary election "was a scam" and that she's focused on South Carolina

Haley speaks during a campaign rally at the Indigo Hall and Events venue on February 5, in Spartanburg, South Carolina.?

GOP presidential candidate Nikki Haley dismissed Tuesday’s Nevada primary results as a scam and continued making her case against renominating former President Donald Trump.

“We always knew Nevada was a scam,” Haley said during a Fox Business interview when asked about the results in Tuesday’s nonbinding primary, where “none of these candidates” received the most votes.

Trump was not on Tuesday’s ballot and is instead participating in Nevada’s caucuses which will be used to allocate delegates.

Haley insisted that her campaign’s focus is “on South Carolina, going into Michigan, going into Super Tuesday. Those are the places that we’re worried about.”

Nikki Haley lost the Nevada primary, with "none of these candidates" getting the most votes

Nikki Haley?lost the non-binding?Nevada Republican primary, where Donald Trump did not compete, to “none of these candidates,” an option voters have to express their dissatisfaction with candidates on the ballot.

The state-mandated contest held on Tuesday wasn’t officially part of the Republican nominating process and didn’t award any delegates.?

The state’s delegates will be awarded based on the results Thursday of party-run caucuses where Trump will be the only major candidate on the ballot.

Inside a Nevada GOP caucus: What takes place during the meetings

People wait for the caucus to begin at Spanish Springs Elementary School in Sparks, Nevada on Thursday.

Even though Nevada already held its primary election, Thursday night is when the state’s Republican Party will award its delegates.

A 2021 state law scrapped Nevada’s presidential caucuses in favor of government-run primaries, but the Nevada GOP opted to hold caucuses this year anyway. It also warned candidates who participated in the primary that they would not be eligible for the caucuses or to receive any delegates.

Former President Donald Trump is the last remaining major contender in Thursday’s caucuses, which effectively guarantees his victory. South Carolina Gov.?Nikki Haley filed to run in the primary.

Here’s what will happen during the caucuses:

  • Voters must be registered Republicans to attend the GOP caucuses.
  • Those who want to participate will show up at their assigned caucus location, show their ID and receive a ballot, according to the Nevada GOP. Voters can make their selection on the ballot and leave or they can stay for the rest of the meeting.
  • At the beginning of the precinct meeting, participants will conduct business like electing a caucus chair and nominating delegates to serve at the county conventions, among other things, according to a sample caucus agenda from the state party. Before voters cast their secret ballot for their presidential preference, attendees have an opportunity to give a speech in favor of their candidate.
  • After that, the votes get counted. Once drop-in voting closes at 7:30 p.m. PT (10:30 p.m. ET), tabulation will start. The vote totals are then announced to everyone at the caucus and reported eventually to the Nevada GOP, the state party said.

Haley is hurting herself and GOP by staying in the race, Trump says

Republican presidential candidate, former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley speaks during a campaign event on February 7 in Los Angeles, California.?

Former President Donald Trump said that Nikki Haley, his last standing opponent in the GOP presidential primary, is hurting herself and the Republican party by keeping her campaign alive.

“I think she hurts herself, but I think she hurts the party, and in a way hurts the country,” Trump said outside of his Mar-a-Lago home on Thursday.

Trump went on to point her losses in Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada, and said that her effort “seems to be dying.”

Haley has recently begun pitching herself as the candidate to “make America normal again” — an argument that comes as Trump’s legal challenges have increasingly been in the spotlight.?

CNN Projection: Trump will win US Virgin Islands GOP caucuses

Former President Donald Trump will win the Republican caucuses in the US Virgin Islands, defeating Nikki Haley, CNN projects.

Trump celebrated with the projected win on Truth Social, saying he heard of results coming in as he was landing in Nevada where he will participate in the GOP caucuses.

“This has been a very Big Day for your Favorite President, the Republican Party, and Democracy!”?Trump posted.

The post was updated with Trump’s reaction to the victory.

Biden willfully retained classified information but will not face charges, special counsel report says

President Joe Biden makes his way to board Marine One from the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, DC, on February 8.

Special counsel Robert Hur?released a searing report Thursday that concluded President Joe Biden willfully retained and disclosed classified military and national security information but recommended he not face charges after a year-long investigation into his handling of classified documents.

“We concluded that no criminal charges are warranted in this matter,” Hur concluded. “We would reach the same conclusion even if Department of Justice policy did not foreclose criminal charges against a sitting president.”

Hur wrote that Biden believed he was allowed to keep the classified information that was contained in his personal notebooks, concluding that prosecutors wouldn’t be able to prove Biden intended to break the law at trial.

Read more about the Hur report

"I’m willing to take the heat." Haley vows she's not going anywhere before Super Tuesday

Haley speaks during a campaign rally at the New Realm Brewing Co. on February 4, in Charleston, South Carolina.?

A day?after losing?to “none of these candidates” in Nevada’s non-binding primary,?Nikki Haley?urged supporters in California, one of several Super Tuesday states she plans to compete in next month, to stick with her.

Haley has outlasted all of former President Donald Trump’s primary?challengers and continues to post strong fundraising numbers, but her campaign faces a daunting, if not impossible, path to winning the GOP presidential nomination. Trump continues to dominate in polls of upcoming primary states, and Republicans who have rallied around the former president are growing more insistent in their calls for her to drop out.

As Trump’s hold on the party?solidifies, speculation has grown about Haley’s political plans – and when she might exit the race.

Read more about Haley’s campaign strategy

Key things to know about tonight's Nevada GOP caucuses, which Trump is poised to win

Sandy Brannum walks into the Clark County Government Center as the Las Vegas strip is seen in the background on Tuesday.

Former?President Donald Trump?is set to add a win in the Nevada Republican caucuses Thursday to his victories in?Iowa?and?New Hampshire?as he continues his march to his party’s 2024 presidential nomination.

Trump faces no major opposition on the ballot in Nevada’s second election in three days. The state GOP opted to ignore the results of?Tuesday’s state-run primary, and instead award its 26 delegates based on the results of Thursday’s party-run caucuses.

The party also barred candidates who participated in the primary — including Trump’s last remaining major opponent, former South Carolina Gov.?Nikki Haley?— from appearing on the caucus ballot.

Trump’s political fate faced judgment beyond the ballot box Thursday. Earlier in the day, the US Supreme Court?heard arguments?about whether the former president’s actions around the?January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol?make him ineligible for office.

Nevada Republicans aren’t the only ones caucusing Thursday. The US Virgin Islands, an American territory that participates in the presidential nominating process but not in the general election, is also?holding Republican caucuses?with both Trump and Haley competing for its four delegates.

Earlier this week, Haley faced an embarrassing outcome in Nevada when she finished second to “none of these candidates” in the nonbinding primary — an outcome that likely reflected many GOP voters’ preference for Trump in a state that gives them the option to express their dissatisfaction with all candidates on the ballot.

Read more about tonight’s GOP caucuses.

Trump projects confidence ahead of Nevada caucuses

Republican presidential candidate and former President Donald Trump speaks during a campaign event at Big League Dreams Las Vegas on January 27, in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Former President Donald Trump projected confidence ahead of tonight’s Nevada caucuses.

“You’ll see big numbers tonight,” Trump said earlier today on “The John Fredericks Show.”

He noted GOP presidential rival Nikki Haley’s loss in?Nevada’s non-binding Republican primary earlier this week to “none of these candidates.”

“She got beaten by ‘none of the above’ and nobody, or depending on the definition that was used at the time, but she got beaten very badly, Trump said.

“A lot of people said that we were given a lot of those votes, so they had a lot of write-in votes for me, but actually it didn’t matter because it was the primary. And in Nevada, the primary doesn’t make any difference — made no difference. It was just a Democrat ploy. And she was in it and … all the differences tonight and today with the caucus, so I don’t know why she did that,” he added.

Yes, Nevada did just have a Republican primary.?Here's why the state is now having GOP caucuses

Donald Trump?is likely to win Nevada’s Republican presidential delegates — but some voters who want to back the former president did not see him on the state’s primary ballot.

The former president is only participating in the caucuses and?thus?wasn’t on primary ballots. Meanwhile, his lone remaining?major?2024 GOP rival, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, was on the primary ballot and isn’t participating in the caucuses.

It’s the result of a dueling 2024 system in which the Silver State is holding two?GOP?contests within three days:

  • The state government-run primary took place on Tuesday. Trump was not on the ballot and no delegates were at stake.
  • The Nevada Republican Party-run caucuses take place Thursday night and?the former president?faces no serious opposition to win the state’s 26 delegates.

The parallel contests are the result of a 2021 Nevada state law that requires a primary — a shift from the state’s previous use of a presidential caucus system. Democrats?in the state?adopted the primary?system but Republicans rejected it, with the state GOP, led by Trump loyalists, opting instead to hold caucuses.

The Nevada GOP warned presidential candidates last year that they would not receive any delegates?if they filed to run in the state’s primary.