BBC
Former Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley has said she plans to vote for Donald Trump, her former opponent and boss, in the 2024 US presidential election.
Ms Haley, who once served as Mr Trump’s United Nations ambassador, was the last of his major rivals to drop out of the party primary contest, in early March.
At the time, she did not endorse him but urged him to earn the votes of the millions who had supported her.
On Wednesday, in her first public remarks since leaving the race, she said Mr Trump “has not been perfect”, but that President Joe Biden “has been a catastrophe”.
Anti-Trump Republican voters largely coalesced behind Ms Haley’s presidential bid earlier this year, and her dormant candidacy is still picking up support more than two months after she left the race.
She won more than 20% of the vote in at least two state primary elections over the past fortnight.
The Biden campaign is seeking to woo these Haley Republicans, a mix of moderate and college-educated independent voters who could help swing the election toward the Democrat. Mr Biden argues that Mr Trump has repeatedly “made it clear he doesn’t want” voters who supported her.
Mr Trump, who has mocked his ex-cabinet member as a “bird brain”, was angered by her prolonged primary challenge and recently shot down rumours that she was under consideration to be his vice-presidential running mate.
Speaking on Wednesday before a gathering at the conservative Hudson Institute think-tank in Washington DC, Ms Haley maintained the criticisms of both parties she made in her campaign.
But she reserved her strongest words for the incumbent.
Mr Biden, she said, oversaw a “debacle” in Afghanistan, “did nothing to deter the invasion” of Ukraine and, most recently, “threw Israel to the wolves”.
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