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2024 Georgia Republican presidential primary

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Main article:2024 Republican Party presidential primaries
2024 Georgia Republican presidential primary

← 2020March 12, 20242028 →
← AS
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59Republican National Convention delegates
 
CandidateDonald TrumpNikki Haley
(withdrawn)
Home stateFloridaSouth Carolina
Delegate count590
Popular vote497,59477,902
Percentage84.49%13.23%

County results
Congressional districts

Trump

  50 – 60%
  60 – 70%
  70 – 80%
  80 – 90%
  >90%

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The2024 Georgia Republican presidential primary election was held on March 12, 2024, as part of theRepublican Party primaries for the2024 presidential election. 59 delegates to the2024 Republican National Convention will be allocated on a winner-take-all basis.[1] The contest was held alongside primaries inHawaii,Mississippi, andWashington.

Candidates

[edit]

The following candidates officially filed by the end of the filing deadline on November 12, 2023:[2]

Endorsements

[edit]
Main article:Endorsements in the 2024 Republican Party presidential primaries
Ron DeSantis (withdrawn)

U.S. Representative

State representative

  • Jodi Lott, District 131 (2023–present), District 122 (2015–2023)[4]
Donald Trump

U.S. Representatives

State executive officials

State senator

Declined to endorse

Governor

Maps

[edit]
Endorsements by incumbent Republicans in theGeorgia State Senate.
  Endorsed Donald Trump (16)
  No endorsement (17)


Results

[edit]
Georgia Republican primary, March 12, 2024[10]
CandidateVotesPercentageActual delegate count
BoundUnboundTotal
Donald Trump497,59484.49%59059
Nikki Haley (withdrawn)77,90213.23%000
Ron DeSantis (withdrawn)7,4571.27%000
Chris Christie (withdrawn)2,0540.35%000
Tim Scott (withdrawn)1,3980.24%000
Vivek Ramaswamy (withdrawn)1,2440.21%000
Asa Hutchinson (withdrawn)3830.07%000
Ryan Binkley (withdrawn)3770.06%000
David Stuckenberg2430.04%000
Doug Burgum (withdrawn)1610.03%000
Perry Johnson (withdrawn)1340.02%000
Total:588,947100.00%59059

Polling

[edit]
States
polled
Dates
administered
Dates
updated
Nikki
Haley
Donald
Trump
Other/
Undecided[a]
Margin
FiveThirtyEight[11]through February 4, 2024March 5, 202416.3%81.1%2.6%Trump +64.8
Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample
size[b]
Margin
of error
Doug
Burgum
Chris
Christie
Ron
DeSantis
Nikki
Haley
Asa
Hutchinson
Mike
Pence
Vivek
Ramaswamy
Tim
Scott
Donald
Trump
OtherUndecided
CNN/SSRS[12]Nov 30 – Dec 7, 2023522 (LV)± 3.3%4%17%17%1%3%55%2%[c]2%
37%61%2%
31%69%
Morning Consult[13]Nov 1–30, 20231,477 (LV)0%2%14%10%0%6%1%66%1%
Morning Consult[13]Oct 1–31, 20231,525 (LV)0%2%15%6%0%3%8%2%63%0%[d]1%
Zogby Analytics[14]Oct 9–12, 2023273 (LV)± 3.9%3%10%9%5%7%5%55%6%
Morning Consult[13]Sep 1–30, 20231,452 (LV)1%15%6%1%4%10%3%61%0%[e]
20/20 Insights[15]Sep 25–28, 2023245 (LV)± 6.3%0%4%16%7%0%4%3%2%58%6%
Morning Consult[13]Aug 1–31, 20231,599 (LV)0%1%14%4%0%5%10%3%62%0%[f]1%
University of Georgia[16]Aug 16–23, 2023807 (LV)± 3.4%0%2%15%3%0%4%3%3%57%1%[g]14%
Morning Consult[13]July 1–31, 20231,633 (LV)0%1%19%3%0%6%9%3%57%1%[h]1%
Morning Consult[13]June 1–30, 20231,599 (LV)0%2%22%3%1%6%3%3%58%0%[i]2%
Morning Consult[13]May 1–31, 20231,470 (LV)21%3%0%6%3%2%61%1%[j]3%
Landmark Communications[17]May 14, 2023800 (LV)± 3.5%2%32%6%2%2%2%40%7%[k]6%
Morning Consult[13]Apr 1–30, 20231,403 (LV)22%4%0%7%3%2%58%4%[l]2%
University of Georgia[18]Apr 2–12, 2023983 (LV)± 3.1%30%4%2%1%51%3%[m]7%
41%51%-
Morning Consult[13]Mar 1–31, 20231,426 (LV)29%4%8%1%1%53%3%[n]1%
Morning Consult[13]Feb 1–28, 20231,280 (LV)32%5%7%0%2%50%4%[o]-
Morning Consult[13]Jan 1–31, 20231,714 (LV)33%3%8%1%50%6%[p]-
Morning Consult[13]Dec 1–31, 2022972 (LV)35%3%8%1%47%3%[q]3%
WPA Intelligence[19][A]Nov 11–13, 2022843 (LV)± 3.4%55%35%10%
Nov 8, 20222022 midterm elections
Echelon Insights[20]Oct 31 – Nov 2, 2022219 (LV)± 5.4%52%36%12%
Echelon Insights[21]Aug 31 – Sep 7, 2022337 (LV)± 4.4%37%54%9%
Phillips Academy[22]Aug 3–7, 2022371 (RV)± 5.1%29%9%54%8%
John Bolton Super PAC[23]Jul 22–24, 2022163 (LV)5%36%6%29%16%[r]19%
Spry Strategies[24]Apr 6–10, 2022600 (LV)± 4.0%20%6%5%1%43%11%[s]15%
39%6%7%2%15%[t]31%
Trafalgar Group (R)[25]Mar 7–9, 2021– (LV)[u]70%18%[v]12%
Jan 20, 2021Inauguration of Joe Biden
University of Nevada/BUSR[26]Dec 30, 2020 – Jan 3, 2021209 (LV)± 7.0%1%3%73%12%[w]
-1%8%36%31%[x]24%

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Calculated by taking the difference of 100% and all other candidates combined.
  2. ^Key:
    A – all adults
    RV – registered voters
    LV – likely voters
    V – unclear
  3. ^ "Other" with 1%
  4. ^Will Hurd with 0%
  5. ^Will Hurd with 0%
  6. ^Will Hurd and Francis Suarez with 0%
  7. ^Francis Suarez with 1%; Will Hurd and Larry Elder with 0%
  8. ^Will Hurd with 1%; Francis Suarez with 0%
  9. ^Liz Cheney and Greg Abbott with 0%
  10. ^Liz Cheney with 1%; Greg Abbott, Glenn Youngkin, and Kristi Noem with 0%
  11. ^Brian Kemp with 7%
  12. ^Liz Cheney and Glenn Youngkin with 1%; Greg Abbott, Mike Pompeo, and Kristi Noem with 0%
  13. ^Liz Cheney with 2%; Mike Pompeo with 1%
  14. ^Mike Pompeo, Liz Cheney, and Glenn Youngkin with 1%; Greg Abbott and Kristi Noem with 0%
  15. ^Greg Abbott, Ted Cruz, Liz Cheney, and Glenn Youngkin with 1%; Mike Pompeo and Kristi Noem with 0%
  16. ^Ted Cruz and Liz Cheney with 2%; and Mike Pompeo and Kristi Noem with 1%; Greg Abbott and Glenn Youngkin with 0%
  17. ^Ted Cruz, Liz Cheney, and Mike Pompeo with 1%; Kristi Noem, Greg Abbott, and Glenn Youngkin with 0%
  18. ^Liz Cheney with 8%; Ted Cruz with 5%; Marco Rubio with 2%; Mike Pompeo with 1%
  19. ^Ted Cruz with 6%; Kristi Noem and Mike Pompeo with 2%
  20. ^Ted Cruz with 9%; Mike Pompeo with 4%; Kristi Noem with 2%
  21. ^Likely Republican primary voter subsample of 1,093 likely general election voters
  22. ^"Would vote for anyone other than Trump" with 14%; would not vote with 4%
  23. ^Ted Cruz with 5%; Marco Rubio with 3%; Mitt Romney with 2%; "Other" with 2%
  24. ^Ted Cruz with 15%; Mitt Romney with 6%; Marco Rubio with 3%; "Other" with 7%

Partisan clients

  1. ^Poll sponsored byClub for Growth

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Georgia Republican Presidential Nominating Process".thegreenpapers.com. January 19, 2023. RetrievedFebruary 7, 2023.
  2. ^"Georgia Republican Party Announces Presidential Primary Candidates for 2024 Election".Atlanta:Georgia Republican Party. November 15, 2023.
  3. ^"Which 2024 Republican Presidential Candidate Has The Most Endorsements?".FiveThirtyEight. April 24, 2023. Archived fromthe original on April 19, 2023. RetrievedApril 25, 2023.
  4. ^Scheckner, Jesse (August 24, 2023)."Ron DeSantis adds endorsements from 21 state, local officials after GOP debate". Florida Politics. RetrievedSeptember 2, 2023.
  5. ^Mitchell, Tia (November 22, 2023)."Georgia U.S. Rep. Buddy Carter endorses Donald Trump for president".The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. RetrievedNovember 22, 2023.
  6. ^Bluestein, Greg (June 10, 2023)."Trump picks up endorsement from Rep. Andrew Clyde".The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. RetrievedJune 10, 2023.
  7. ^abcdZaidi, Mubashir (June 10, 2023)."WATCH: Former President Trump speaks at Georgia GOP Convention in Columbus".WRBL. RetrievedJune 10, 2023.
  8. ^Bump, Philip (November 17, 2022)."Who has signed up to back Trump in 2024 — and who loudly hasn't".The Washington Post. Archived fromthe original on November 19, 2022. RetrievedMarch 16, 2023.
  9. ^Mion, Landon (April 19, 2023)."Gov. Kemp urges Republicans to support a candidate who can win in 2024, move past previous elections".Fox News. RetrievedJanuary 31, 2024.
  10. ^"Georgia Presidential Primary". The AP. RetrievedApril 5, 2024.
  11. ^FiveThirtyEight
  12. ^CNN/SSRS
  13. ^abcdefghijklMorning Consult
  14. ^Zogby Analytics
  15. ^20/20 Insights
  16. ^University of Georgia
  17. ^Landmark Communications
  18. ^University of Georgia
  19. ^WPA Intelligence
  20. ^Echelon Insights
  21. ^Echelon Insights
  22. ^Phillips Academy
  23. ^John Bolton Super PAC
  24. ^Spry Strategies
  25. ^Trafalgar Group (R)
  26. ^University of Nevada/BUSR
January
February
March
Super Tuesday
April
May
June
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