Former President Donald Trump easily won Nevada’s Republican caucus in a race where he was functionally the only remaining candidate on the ballot, according to returns released Thursday night.
With more than 60,000 votes counted as of 5:36 a.m. Friday, Trump led with 99.1 percent of the vote. That included 99 percent support in Clark County, which includes Las Vegas and accounted for roughly half (29,900) of those votes.
The Silver State win secured 26 delegates for Trump, his largest single delegate haul thus far, and another electoral victory heading into a Republican primary in South Carolina later this month that could seal the 2024 Republican nomination for the former president.
Ryan Binkley, a Texas banking CEO and pastor, was the only other active candidate on the caucus ballot. Early returns showed him with less than 1 percent of the vote. Four additional candidates — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, businessman Vivek Ramaswamy, North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie — filed to participate in the caucus last October but ended their campaigns well before Thursday’s contest.
Trump’s Nevada win follows victories in Iowa — where he beat second-place Ron DeSantis by nearly 30 points — and New Hampshire, where he bested former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley by about 11 percentage points. Hours before Nevada’s caucus Thursday, Trump also won a caucus in the U.S. Virgin Islands by 48 points.
“If we win this state, we easily win the election in November,” Trump told a crowd at the Treasure Island in Las Vegas Thursday night after the race was called. “We have to win the election.”
It also comes after another de facto Trump win Tuesday, after “none of these candidates” trounced Haley in Nevada’s nonbinding Republican primary by a 2-1 margin. Of the original Republican field, only three major candidates — Haley, former Vice President Mike Pence and Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC) — filed to run in the primary, but Pence and Scott also ended their campaigns early. The state Republican Party adopted rules prohibiting candidates from running in both contests, with delegates only allocated to caucus participants.
The Trump campaign seized on the result this week, saying in a statement that Haley’s defeat was “humiliating, embarrassing and utterly overwhelming.” The result also provided cover for the campaign, which had begun to worry internally that Nevada’s caucus result could prove hollow if turnout dipped too low, according to a report from Axios.
Around 10 p.m., a tranche of more than 23,000 votes from Clark County pushed Trump’s margin of victory over 99 percent — exceeding the 22,600 votes Haley received in the primary. However, by early Friday morning, turnout had reached about 60,000 votes.
In a speech delivered alongside Burgum and New York Jets owner Woody Johnson, Trump hammered immigration and called on the Supreme Court to “preserve democracy,” an apparent reference to a case heard Thursday concerning whether states have the power to remove Trump off the ballot.
“The Supreme Court, hopefully, will be doing something in terms of helping our country and preserving democracy,”
Trump said. “We have to preserve our democracy.”
Trump also nodded to Haley’s Tuesday loss — sarcastically congratulating “none of the above” on their primary win. Burgum, taking the microphone briefly, said Nevada sent a signal to the nation: “This primary is over, President Trump has won.”
Watch party turned victory party
Enthusiastic Trump supporters filled a ballroom at the Treasure Island, several wearing white hats with “Team Trump Captain” embroidered to show off their role as caucus captains, who were in charge of tallying the votes.
Eva Landau served as a caucus captain on Thursday evening. She said she regained trust in the electoral process after seeing and being part of the hand counting.
“This was very, very exciting … That's the way it's supposed to be — the election. You count by hand,” Landau, wearing a red “Latinas for Trump” T-shirt, said. “You say, ‘okay, Trump.’ Show to the camera, show to the people, one line until you get five, right? That's the transparency that we need in the United States.”
For Landau, a 43-year-old originally from Bolivia, immigration, border security and human trafficking are her main concerns. Those issues dominated Trump’s speech during a rally in East Las Vegas two weeks ago.
When asked how well Trump is appealing to Latino voters, which polling has shown are key to winning elections, Jesus Marquez, a political consultant and long-time Trump supporter, told The Nevada Independent that he saw “a lot” of Latino faces at the caucus location he attended.
“Just the fact that Latinos are getting involved with the caucus, [is significant because] that is not normally the case,” Marquez said. “[Trump] didn't just win but he made the people turn out to vote … even though there was no competition for him in this caucus, this is the initiation of a grassroots operation to win the state in November. This is the beginning of that — we're already in a general election mode.”
One week, two elections
This week’s bifurcated Republican contests — primary and caucus — are the end result of a monthslong dispute between a Nevada GOP determined to hold a traditional caucus and a 2021 state law creating presidential preference primaries for both major parties.
Under that 2021 law — passed under unified Democratic control of state government — a state-run primary would be held so long as at least two candidates filed. It was a prelude to a move by the Democratic National Committee to bump Nevada up its nominating calendar, a move opposed at the time by Republicans.
The Nevada Republican Party sued the state to stop the primary in May 2023, roughly four months before it would finalize the decision to hold the caucus. In July, a state judge ruled that both a primary and a caucus could move forward. Republicans and the state eventually agreed to drop the suit in January.
But the state GOP has pitched its caucus as a way to reject many of the Democratic-backed election policy reforms adopted since 2020, including universal mail ballots. Under party rules, the caucus required in-person voting barring select exceptions, and pledged to use paper ballots, voter ID and a ban on super PAC participation in the caucus process.