2024_Republican_Party_presidential_candidates

2024 Republican Party presidential candidates

2024 Republican Party presidential candidates

Republican candidates for president of the United States in 2024


The following is a list of candidates associated with the 2024 Republican Party presidential primaries for the 2024 United States presidential election. As of December 2023, more than 400 candidates have filed with the Federal Election Commission (FEC) to run for the Republican nomination in 2024.[1]

Quick Facts

Major candidates

The following candidates have received substantial major media coverage; are or have been elected to major public office such as president, vice president, governor, U.S. senator or U.S. representative; or have been included in at least five national polls.

Presumptive nominee

More information Name, Born ...

Alternate ballot options

More information Name, Bound delegates ...

Withdrew during the primaries

The candidate in this section have suspended their campaigns, or have otherwise ceased campaigning and ended their bids for the nomination during the primary season.

More information Name, Born ...

Withdrew before the primaries

The candidates in this section have suspended their campaigns, or have otherwise ceased campaigning and ended their bids for the nomination before any primary contests were held, however a few did so after securing ballot spots in a small number of states.

More information Name, Born ...

Other candidates

On the ballot in one or more states

  • Scott Alan Ayers, Illinois[55]
  • Bob Carney Jr., perennial candidate from Minnesota[56]
  • John Anthony Castro, tax consultant and perennial candidate from Texas[57]
  • Heath Fulkerson, Nevada[58]
  • Peter Jedick, author from Ohio[55]
  • Donald Kjornes, former real estate agent from South Dakota[58]
  • Mary Maxwell, perennial candidate[55]
  • Glenn J. McPeters, Vermont[56]
  • Scott Peterson Merrell, Connecticut[56]
  • Darius L. Mitchell, Massachusetts[56]
  • Sam Sloan, former broker-dealer United States Chess Federation executive board member, and perennial candidate from New York[56]
  • Rachel Swift, Maryland[59]

Withdrawn

On the ballot in 25 or more states

  • Ryan Binkley, pastor and businessman from Texas. (withdrew February 27, 2024 and endorsed Trump)[60][61]

On the ballot in ten or more states

  • David Stuckenberg, former air force reserve officer from Texas.[62](withdrew March 26, 2024)[63]

On the ballot in one or more states

  • Hirsh V. Singh, engineer and perennial candidate from New Jersey[58] (withdrew October 31, 2023, and endorsed Trump)[64]

Failed to obtain ballot access

Declined to be candidates

The following notable individuals have been the subject of speculation about their possible candidacy but have publicly denied interest in running.

Timeline

Francis Suarez 2024 presidential campaignWill Hurd 2024 presidential campaignPerry Johnson 2024 presidential campaignLarry Elder 2024 presidential campaignMike Pence 2024 presidential campaignTim Scott 2024 presidential campaignDoug Burgum 2024 presidential campaignChris Christie 2024 presidential campaignVivek Ramaswamy 2024 presidential campaignAsa Hutchinson 2024 presidential campaignDonald Trump 2024 presidential campaignNikki Haley 2024 presidential campaignRon DeSantis 2024 presidential campaign
Active campaign Exploratory committee Withdrawn candidate Republican National Convention
Midterm elections Debates Primaries

Ballot access

The following is a table for which candidates have received ballot access in which states. If a state does not appear in the table, the filing deadline in the state has not passed.

Yes indicates that the candidate was on the ballot for the primary contest.
No indicates that the candidate did not appear on the ballot in that state's contest.
Maybe indicates that a candidate withdrew before the election but was still listed on the ballot.

More information Contest, Date ...

Candidates listed in italics have suspended their campaigns.

  1. Scott Alan Ayers, Doug Burgum, Robert S. Carney Jr., John Anthony Castro, Chris Christie, Peter Jedick, Perry Johnson, Donald Kjornes, Mary Maxwell, Glenn J. McPeters, Scott Peterson Merrell, Darius L. Mitchell, Mike Pence, Tim Scott, Hirsh V. Singh, Samuel Howard Sloan, David Stuckenberg, Rachel Swift.

    Recognized Write-ins: Joe Biden (running as a Democrat), Dean Phillips (running as a Democrat), Marianne Williamson (running as a Democrat), Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (running as an Independent), Mark Greenstein (running as a Democrat), CeaseFire (not a candidate)
  2. John Anthony Castro, Heath V. Fulkerson, Mike Pence, Tim Scott, Hirsh V. Singh, Donald Kjornes, None of These Candidates
  3. Chris Christie, David Stuckenberg
  4. David Stuckenburg
  5. Chris Christie, Doug Burgum, David Stuckenberg
  6. David Stuckenberg
  7. Chris Christie, David Stuckenberg
  8. Doug Burgum, Chris Christie, David Stuckenberg
  9. Chris Christie, David Stuckenberg, Rachel Swift

    Recognized Write-in candidates: Hugo C Aguilar, Ryan Stephen Ehrenreich, Douglas Groves

    Doug Burgum filed for inclusion but withdrew before the ballot was finalized
  10. Chris Christie, Walter Iwachiw (write-in), Rachel Swift (write-in)
  11. Chris Christie, David Stuckenberg
  12. Chris Christie, David Stuckenberg
  13. Chris Christie, David Stuckenberg, Rachel Swift
  14. Perry Johnson
  15. Rachel Swift, David Stuckenberg

See also

Notes

  1. Trump's state of residence in 2016 was New York, but his state of residence changed to Florida when he moved to Mar-a-Lago in 2019.
  2. The Delaware Republican primary was cancelled and Trump was declared the winner after no other candidate filed[5]
  3. The South Dakota Republican primary was cancelled and Trump was declared the winner after no other candidate filed[6]
  4. Archived August 23, 2023, at the Wayback Machine
  5. This primary has not been officially sanctioned by the RNC.
  6. Trump was removed from the ballot by the Maine Secretary of State due to his participation in the January 6 attack, but the decision was placed on hold while the related case Colorado case of Anderson v. Griswold makes its way through the courts. On March 4, 2024, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Trump would not be removed from the ballot.
  7. cancelled
  8. Includes No Preference, None of These Candidates, and Uninstructed

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