Nikki Haley is trucking along as a presidential candidate, even though all indications are that her future primary prospects are yet worse.
When I worked at Universal Studios as a screenwriter, the then head of production, Ned Tanen, had a saying regarding the plans and ideas of my fellow writers, directors, and producers:
โIf one person says youโre drunk, ignore him. If six people say youโre drunk, sit down.โ
Iโm far from sure this advice originated with Mr. Tanen, but, although I was occasionally the target, it made basic sense.
I was reminded of this when I read the results of Nevadaโs unofficial Republican presidential primary in which seven people competed, three of whom I had never heard of.
In what had been imputed by some a head-to-head battle with former president Donald J. Trump, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley lost to โNone of These Candidatesโ by a hugely embarrassing 63.2 percent to 30.5 percent.
(Mr. Trump was not on the list. Heโs competing in the Nevada Caucus where one can actually win real delegates to the party convention.)
In the words of Ned Tanen, itโs time for Ms. Haley to โsit down.โ
But she, at least so far, is trucking along as a presidential candidate, even though all indications are that her future primary prospects are yet worse with an imminent humiliation in her home state.
So what exactly is Nikki Haley doing and why?
The money people have their own reasons.
Although Iโm no fan of The Bulwark, an article they had the other day detailed the alleged behind-the-scenes shenanigans and outright greed of political strategists, political action committees, and so forth backstage of the now defunct Gov. Ron DeSantis campaign.
Taken together, they would be enough to make you give up on the viability of elections in our country in their entirety.
Meanwhile, as late as Feb. 5, Bloomberg reported, โWealthy Donors Continue to Pour Money Into Nikki Haleyโs Long-Shot Presidential Bid,โ with her best month ever ($16.5 million) being January 2024.
What are these people (and Ms. Haley) doing throwing away such munificent funds that might more justifiably be put into pediatric cancer or Alzheimerโs research?
Someโnotably, one hears, New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununuโare attempting to position Ms. Haley as the vice-presidential candidate to Mr. Trump, a possibility that seemed unlikely from the start, but grows more so with each passing day.
Byย Roger L. Simon