MANCHESTER, N.H. — Former President Donald Trump has accused one of his rivals, Nikki Haley, of courting Democrats to vote for her in the Jan. 23 Republican presidential primary in New Hampshire.
“As you know, Nikki Haley in particular is counting on the Democrats and liberals to infiltrate the Republican primary,” Trump said at his Jan. 16 rally in Atkinson, New Hampshire. “You know that that’s what’s happening. Have a group of people coming in that are not Republicans and it’s artificially boosting her numbers here, although we’re still leading her by a lot.” He repeated the accusation in Portsmouth the next day.
We asked the Trump campaign for evidence and received no reply.
Trump has previously portrayed Haley, his former United Nations ambassador, as a liberal, including on border and immigration policies.
Trump’s statement is misleading. New Hampshire voters registered as Democrats cannot vote for Republican presidential primary candidates.
People not affiliated with a party can vote in the primary, and Haley is courting those voters.
In New Hampshire, the deadline to switch parties and vote in the presidential primary was Oct. 6, 2023. About 5,000 people changed their affiliation — the majority from Democratic to undeclared, according to the secretary of state’s office.
Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley greets New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu, one of her key backers, Jan. 17, 2024, at a rally in Rochester, N.H. (Louis Jacobson/PolitiFact)
Haley is courting independent voters
Registered Democrats cannot vote in New Hampshire’s GOP primary.
But the state’s “undeclared voters” who are not affiliated with the Republican or Democratic parties can still vote in the GOP presidential primary. Undeclared voters who vote in the Republican primary are then registered as Republicans, although they can later change their registration back to undeclared, said Anna Sventek, a spokesperson for Secretary of State David M. Scanlan.
As of Dec. 28, 2023, New Hampshire had more undeclared voters than voters registered with either of the two major political parties:
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Undeclared: 343,192
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Republicans: 267,905
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Democrats: 262,262
Semafor reported that Haley in December said her goal was “to get as many people in the tent as we can.”
“If we get independents, if we get conservative Democrats, that’s what the Republican Party should pursue,” she said.
New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu, who has endorsed Haley, told Semafor that Haley was appealing to undeclared voters.
“A lot of them tend towards her, not because she wavers on policy, not because she moves away from her conservative credentials, but because she comes at it with this transparent sense of trust,” he said in December.
Olivia Perez-Cubas, a Haley campaign spokesperson, told PolitiFact that Haley is “not counting on Dems and liberals to infiltrate the party. Democrats can’t vote in the NH primary.”
However, when asked about undeclared voters, Perez-Cubas said Haley’s campaign welcomes support from voters who are “fed up” with President Joe Biden and “don’t want a Trump-Biden rematch.”
Polls show that Haley is in second place, far behind Trump, in New Hampshire. But she is leading Trump among undeclared voters.
A Jan. 16 online poll of likely primary voters by St. Anselm College found that 52% of undeclared voters said they will vote for Haley, 37% will vote for Trump and 4% will vote for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.
A CNN poll conducted by the University of New Hampshire Jan. 4 to Jan. 8 found that Haley’s support among undeclared voters has grown since November. The poll, taken before former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie exited the race, showed that Haley topped Trump by 26 points among undeclared voters.
Bradford Cook, chair of the state Ballot Law Commission and a registered Republican, told PolitiFact in an email that Haley and DeSantis are trying to attract unaffiliated voters.
“How successful they will be we shall see,” Cook said.
PolitiFact Senior Correspondent Louis Jacobson contributed to this article.
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