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Ramaswamy: 2024 can be Reagan-style ‘unifying’ election for GOP

  • Donald Trump trying to build unity among Republicans for his candidacy
  • Vivek Ramaswamy dropped out of race after Iowa caucuses
  • Ramaswamy: Trump the preferred choice among GOP primary voters
Vivek Ramaswamy greets supporters at a campaign stop in Iowa.

SIOUX CITY, IOWA – JANUARY 08: Republican presidential candidate businessman Vivek Ramaswamy greets attendees to a campaign stop at the Hampton Inn & Suites Sioux City South on January 08, 2024 in Sioux City, Iowa. A snowstorm has altered the schedules of several Republican candidates in Iowa, a state where Republicans will be the first to select their party’s nomination for the 2024 presidential race when they go to caucus on January 15, 2024. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

 

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(NewsNation) — Now out of the 2024 presidential election race, Vivek Ramaswamy is backing former President Donald Trump, whom he believes could win the general election in a landslide.

“I think this could be a Reagan, 1980s-style, dare I say it, unifying election,” Ramaswamy said Tuesday on “The Hill on NewsNation.”

Trump is hoping Tuesday’s results in the New Hampshire primary will help him build unity among Republicans to rally them around his candidacy. On Monday, he used a rally to push towards that goal by inviting several of his former GOP rivals on stage, including Ramaswamy.

The 38-year-old biotech entrepreneur dropped out of the race after a fourth-place finish in the Iowa caucuses and endorsed Trump despite once saying the country needs a leader with “fresh legs.”

“That was the whole premise for my candidacy, but the beauty of our country is that the people of the country get to decide who actually leads it,” Ramaswamy said. “The people in Iowa, and I think the people across this country in the Republican primary base, have been clear about who they want to see as their next president.”

Trump was in New Hampshire on Tuesday making a last-minute push with voters in hopes of securing a victory against former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley. Down roughly 10 points in polling ahead of the race, Haley was looking to eat into Trump’s margin or pull off an upset victory.

Haley and Trump are the last remaining candidates on the Republican side after Ramaswamy and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis dropped out following the Iowa caucuses, where DeSantis finished second and Haley third.

Haley, in pitches to voters, has warned Trump and President Joe Biden are past their prime, advocating for a different path for the country.

Ramaswamy isn’t concerned about Trump’s age.

“What really matters is the age of your ideas. What she wants to do is go back to an older vision of the Republican Party, fighting pointless foreign wars and with a domestic surveillance state that reflects Dick Cheney’s old Republican Party,” Ramaswamy said. “I do think that America First is the way of the future of the next generation for the Republican Party.”

Politics

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