She had a grand ambition to knock off Donald Trump and become the Republican Party’s choice to run in November’s US election.
But Nikki Haley couldn’t do it and it’s almost certain now that Trump will run against Joe Biden for president again even as he faces more than 90 criminal charges.
So why has she held on? Why doesn’t she just give up before almost certain defeat at so-called Super Tuesday next week, the biggest contest in the primary process.
Featured:
Kim Hoggard, a former staffer during Reagan and George H. W. Bush administrations
What you need to know about the Voice
Interest rates under a new look RBA
The Airbnb crackdown
Should ‘special schools’ be shut down?
TikTok’s role in this referendum
Pezzullo, politics and the public service
Lockdowns and the legacy of Daniel Andrews
How a controversial autism treatment was exposed
How an oil cartel is pushing up petrol prices
Russell Brand’s conspiracies and his defenders
Surviving the extreme heat this summer
What taking on the tax office cost a whistleblower
What China wants with Australian greyhounds
How 100,000 migrants are testing New York
Putin, Kim and the dictators’ deal
Summer blackouts and our slow energy switch
Why your slice of the economic pie is shrinking
What to expect this bushfire season
No simple answers on the Voice in remote Australia
What contact sport is doing to our brains
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Hack
The Briefing
Full Story
7am
The Front