Trump captures North Dakota

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BISMARCK, North Dakota — Donald Trump won the North Dakota Republican presidential caucuses on Monday, adding to his string of victories heading into Super Tuesday.

The former president finished first in voting conducted at 12 caucus sites, ahead of former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley. The results resumes Trump’s winning streak, which was briefly interrupted on Sunday when Haley notched her first victory of the campaign in the District of Columbia’s primary.

The White House hopefuls now turn their attention to Super Tuesday, when results will pour in from states across the country in contests that amount to the single biggest delegate haul of any day in the presidential primary. Trump and President Joe Biden are dominating their races and are on track to winning their nominations later this month.

Under North Dakota’s rules, candidates are eligible to win delegates if they finish with at least 20percent of the vote. However, a candidate who wins at least 60 percent of the vote receives all of the state’s 29 delegates.

Four candidates were on the ballot, including Trump and Haley. The other candidates, who have received little attention, were Florida businessperson David Stuckenberg and Texas businessperson and pastor Ryan Binkley, who recently ended his campaign.

Trump swept North Dakota’s three Electoral College votes in 2016 and 2020, winning about 63 percent and 65 percent of those votes, respectively. The last Democrat to win North Dakota in November was Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964.

As president, Trump visited Bismarck and Mandan in 2017 to talk about tax cuts, and he campaigned twice in Fargo in 2018 for Kevin Cramer in the then-congressmember’s successful Senate bid against Democratic Sen. Heidi Heitkamp.

North Dakota’s Democratic-NPL Party is holding a presidential primary almost entirely by mail, with mail-in voting from Feb. 20 to March 30, and limited in-person voting for residents of Indian reservations. President Biden, Rep. Dean Phillips and six others are on the ballot.

A third party will count ballots in Fargo on March 30, with results available on the party’s website afterward.