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MANCHESTER, N.H. – Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis views a new endorsement for former President Donald Trump as a “major blow” to another Republican presidential nomination rival – Nikki Haley.

And DeSantis, in an interview with Fox News at Saint Anselm College on the outskirts of New Hampshire’s largest city, said he would return to the Granite State ahead of Tuesday’s presidential primary after a weekend campaign swing in South Carolina.

DeSantis was interviewed a couple of hours after Fox News confirmed that Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina would endorse Trump at a campaign rally Friday night in Concord, New Hampshire.

“I actually thought Scott had already endorsed him,” DeSantis said. “I do think that that is a blow to Nikki Haley.”

TIM SCOTT BACKING DONALD TRUMP IN 2024 GOP PRESIDENTIAL RACE

Both the former president, who’s the commanding front-runner in the GOP nomination race, and Haley – the former South Carolina governor who later served as U.N. ambassador in the Trump administration – called Scott in recent days as they both tried to secure Scott’s endorsement.

Scott’s backing of Trump, whom the senator rarely criticized on the campaign trail during his White House run, is the latest major endorsement for the former president in the state that holds the first southern primary in the GOP nomination race.

South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster and Sen. Lindsey Graham have long supported Trump. 

HALEY TURNS UP THE HEAT ON TRUMP AS SHE TRIES TO CLOSE THE GAP WITH THE GOP FRONT-RUNNER

The state’s Feb. 24 Republican presidential primary is the next major contest in the Republican schedule following the New Hampshire primary. The contest is winner-take-all, which means the victor in the Palmetto State will capture all 50 Republican delegates at stake.

Haley called Senator Tim Scott’s endorsement of Trump “disappointing” but “not surprising.” 

In an interview in Manchester, New Hampshire with Fox News’ Bryan Llenas, Haley said “we’re seeing all the Washington Insiders go towards Trump” and said Scott is part of the “legislative class that’s never loved me.” 

Haley added that the endorsement of the people of New Hampshire is all the matters. 

And when pushed on whether the endorsement felt personal – given that as governor in 2012 she appointed then-Rep. Scott to fill an open Senate seat, and that he traveled to New Hampshire to endorse Trump – she said “he’s got to live with his decision. So we’ll let him do that.”  

Donald Trump campaigns in New Hampshire

Trump scored a massive victory in Monday night’s low turnout Iowa caucuses, with DeSantis edging out Haley for a distant second place. But the polls in New Hampshire indicate Trump hovering around 50% support, double digits ahead of Haley, with DeSantis a very distant third in the single digits.

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Haley has called DeSantis “invisible” in New Hampshire as she frames the primary battle as a two-candidate race between herself and Trump.

DeSantis on Friday argued that “the whole Haley thing, I think, is falling apart now.”

He emphasized that in New Hampshire, Haley has spent an inordinate amount of money. And he argued that her efforts in the Granite State, where moderates and independent voters play an influential role in the state’s storied primary, were over the top.

“I was talking to someone that said they got in one day seven Nikki Haley mailers. It’s like, well, wait a minute. Like the first six aren’t going to get you to vote for that magic seven all of a sudden. So some of this is just overkill, he said. 

Nikki Haley tries to close the gap with Trump ahead of New Hampshire primary

The Florida governor campaigns Saturday and Sunday in South Carolina, and there’s speculation he wouldn’t return to New Hampshire ahead of Tuesday’s primary.

But DeSantis told Fox News “I think our plan is to come fly back Sunday night here from South Carolina.”

“But look, South Carolina’s important,” he added. “This is Nikki Haley’s home state. She obviously can’t beat Donald Trump there.”

 

DeSantis dismissed the notion that he was looking for an exit ramp from the 2024 campaign to potentially run again in four years.

“2028. That’s so far away. I mean, in political time,” he said. “I’m focused on 2024. I mean, we we’ve got to get our act together as a party. And I think the Iowa results really should have, should be alarm bells for the party because the turnout was so anemic.”

Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub.

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