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National Review
National Review
7 Feb 2024
Zach Kessel


NextImg:‘None of These Candidates’ Option Wins Nevada GOP Primary

The Nevada Republican presidential primary election has been called, with the “none of these candidates” option — a choice appearing on the ballot in both the Republican and Democratic primaries — winning over other choices, most notably including former ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley, former vice president Mike Pence, and U.S. senator Tim Scott (S.C.). 

Called with 50 percent of the vote in, “none of these candidates” garnered 60.3 percent of the reported vote, while Haley earned 33.4 percent and Pence and Scott — neither of whom is running an active campaign for the presidency — earned 4.2 percent and 1.3 percent, respectively. 

Former president Donald Trump — who currently holds a 54.7 percent lead in national GOP polls, according to the RealClearPolitics average — did not compete in the primary, choosing instead to enter Thursday night’s caucus run by the state Republican Party. In a twist unique to this year’s contests, GOP candidates were required to decide between the primary and the caucus. Nevada had traditionally held the latter option in each presidential election cycle, but after the state passed a law in 2021 replacing the caucus with a primary and its Republican Party unsuccessfully sued, the Nevada GOP established its own caucus. 

While registered Republicans are able to vote in both contests, only the results of Thursday night’s caucus will determine the allocation of the state’s delegates, and Trump is the only major candidate on that ballot.

Haley’s campaign on Monday described Nevada’s system as being “rigged” in Trump’s favor, arguing that the confusing nature of the split between caucus and primary has meant that the campaign has not placed much emphasis on the state in its strategy.

On the other side of the aisle, President Joe Biden won the Silver State with 90.2 percent of the votes counted, while the Democratic Party’s “none of these candidates” option won 5.7 percent. The next closest candidate was Marianne Williamson with 2.5 percent.