Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley is having a moment.
As Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ star falls in the Republican presidential race, Haley’s is rising. She’s catching up to him in national polls, neck and neck with him in Iowa and trouncing him in New Hampshire. As the GOP’s White House candidate pool shrinks, she’s snatching up megadonors who as recently as this summer may have been expected to go with DeSantis.
Haley scored another victory Tuesday, when the political network Americans for Prosperity Action, an outfit founded by the billionaire right-wing activist Koch brothers, issued an endorsement of her. “In sharp contrast to recent elections that were dominated by the negative baggage of Donald Trump and in which good candidates lost races that should have been won, Nikki Haley, at the top of the ticket, would boost candidates up and down the ballot, winning the key independent and moderate voters that Trump has no chance to win,” AFP Action senior adviser Emily Seidel wrote in a memo announcing the endorsement.
Haley and DeSantis are effectively competing for the “In case of emergency, break glass” position.
The endorsement matters both materially and symbolically. AFP Action has deep pockets, and it has already spent a significant amount of money on the race. It has spent $4 million on ads so far in the election cycle and raised more than $70 million in the first half of the year, according to NBC News And as The New York Times reports, the endorsement will strengthen her organizational capacity significantly by giving her access to a direct mail program, field workers and phone bank operations. More broadly, AFP Action’s decision is a signal that in the “invisible primary” — during which powerful donors, activists and party elites try to pick candidates before the actual primaries begin — Haley is moving ahead of DeSantis.
As exciting as all this news is for Haley, it shouldn’t breed delusions about her winning the Republican nomination. Given the extraordinary size of Trump’s lead in the polls, she isn’t competing for front-runner status, but rather for the status of front-runner against Trump. Realistically speaking, the best outcome she can hope for at the moment is to have her face representing the runner-up in most state primary results. Which raises the question: Does any of this matter?
It does, for a few reasons.








