Trump Wins 6th Straight Primary With Triumph in Michigan

Fresh off his win in South Carolina, Trump has again defeated Haley as he marches toward the GOP nomination.
Trump Wins 6th Straight Primary With Triumph in Michigan
Former President and 2024 presidential hopeful Donald Trump pauses while speaking during a "Get Out the Vote" rally in Waterford Township, Mich., on Feb. 17, 2024. Alex Wroblewski/AFP via Getty Images
Nathan Worcester
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LANSING, Mich.—Former President Donald Trump soundly defeated former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley in Michigan’s Feb. 27 Republican presidential primary, notching his sixth-straight primary victory as he marches toward the GOP nomination.

The Associated Press called the race for President Trump right after the polls closed.

The result is another blow to Ms. Haley, coming days after a double-digit defeat in her home state of South Carolina. However, she has vowed to stay on through Super Tuesday on March 5, when numerous delegate-heavy states will hold their primaries.

Ms. Haley campaigned in Michigan on Feb. 25 and Feb. 26 and was in Colorado on Feb. 27, part of a multiday tour ahead of Super Tuesday.

The former U.N. ambassador faces very challenging delegate math as Super Tuesday approaches, suggesting her time in the race is finite.

Meanwhile, President Trump thanked the Michigan GOP after the race was called for him.

“I’m so proud of the results because they’re far greater than anticipated,” the former president said in remarks to the state’s GOP.

“We win Michigan; we win the whole thing,” he said.

Ms. Haley’s campaign, meanwhile, cast the results as a “warning sign” for President Trump.

“Joe Biden is losing about 20 percent of the Democratic vote today, and many say it’s a sign of his weakness in November. Donald Trump is losing about 35 percent of the vote. That’s a flashing warning sign for Trump in November,” Haley campaign spokesperson Olivia Perez-Cubas said in a statement.

While 16 Michigan delegates to the Republican National Convention were allocated based on the primary results, the majority—39—of the state’s 55 delegates will be awarded as a result of caucusing on March 2.

The main event will be in Grand Rapids, where former Rep. Pete Hoekstra (R-Mich.) will oversee a convention at which party insiders will vote on how to divvy up the remaining delegates.

Yet, while Mr. Hoekstra has the backing of President Trump and the Republican National Committee (RNC), his accession to leader of the Michigan GOP hasn’t been universally recognized by Republicans in the state.

Many in the party maintain that Kristina Karamo was improperly removed from her role as state GOP chairwoman; she’s staging her own convention in Detroit.

An ongoing lawsuit against Ms. Karamo could end the standoff before March 2. On the primary Election Day itself, the judge in the case ruled that her ouster from the leadership role was legal.

Meanwhile, President Joe Biden handily won the Democratic presidential primary in the state, garnering 78.6 percent of the vote.

But a campaign from Israel–Gaza ceasefire activists to get Democrats to select “uncommitted” on the ballot in that primary got some results. Sixteen percent of votes were for the “uncommitted” option, signaling dissension in Democratic ranks over the Middle Eastern conflict.

While the Israel–Gaza conflict is an electoral sore point everywhere, it’s particularly sensitive in Michigan, which has large Arab Christian and Arab Muslim communities.

Former Rep. Justin Amash, an Arab Christian and former Republican who has recently emerged as a critic of President Biden after supporting President Trump’s first impeachment while in office, recently mourned the death of a second cousin as a result of an Israeli airstrike on the Church of Saint Porphyrius in Gaza.

Michiganders Back Trump

President Trump’s supporters in the state include Joe Bancroft, who was leaving a polling place at a library in Delta Charter Township when he spoke with The Epoch Times.

“He’s not a perfect person. Okay. And he is a strong person. And he’s rough around the edges. But here’s the thing. Who do you want to lead this country?” he said.

His wife, by contrast, voted for President Biden.

At an early voting site in Southgate, Michigan, downriver from Detroit, the Sikorskis—Douglas and his wife, Sandy—formed a united front for President Trump.

“The RNC should be devoting all the funds to President Trump,” Mr. Sikorski told The Epoch Times on Feb. 25, the last day of early voting.

When asked if that priority could hinder important spending on other Republican races, the couple clarified that they felt the RNC could be trusted to use its resources more intelligently under new leadership—"Now that Ronna Romney [McDaniel] is out,” Ms. Sikorski said.

Ms. Romney McDaniel announced her resignation as RNC chairwoman on Feb. 26, saying she would leave after Super Tuesday.

President Trump has endorsed Michael Whatley, chair of the North Carolina Republican Party, as Ms. Romney McDaniel’s replacement. He hopes to replace RNC Co-chair Drew McKissick, who’s also resigning, with his daughter-in-law Lara Trump.

“We need to have the biggest legal ballot harvesting operation this country has ever seen,” Ms. Trump told The Epoch Times in an exclusive interview on Feb. 21, before she spoke at a campaign stop in South Carolina.

The Sikorskis said they supported President Trump from the very beginning.

The former president’s narrow victory in Michigan in 2016 was instrumental in vaulting him to the Oval Office.

Most recent polling shows President Trump ahead of President Biden in Michigan.
An earlier version of this report incorrectly stated the number of President Trump’s primary wins. The Epoch Times regrets this error.
Nathan Worcester
Nathan Worcester
Author
Nathan Worcester covers national politics for The Epoch Times and has also focused on energy and the environment. Nathan has written about everything from fusion energy and ESG to national and international politics. He lives and works in Chicago. Nathan can be reached at [email protected].
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