.
Donations The day after the first debate, Ramaswamy's campaign confirmed it raised an additional $450,000 from donors since the previous night, with an average donation of $38. In the first three months of Ramaswamy's campaign, he raised $1.16 million from donors, along with $10.55 million that he donated to his own campaign. In the second quarter, he raised $2.7 million from unique donors, and donated an additional $5 million of personal wealth to his campaign. On July 21, 2023, Ramaswamy's campaign confirmed to
The Hill that it had reached 65,000 unique donors. According to Ramaswamy, 40% of his 65,000 donors came from individuals who either made their first donation to a Republican, or their first political donation ever. Ramaswamy was interviewed by commentators across the political spectrum including
Tucker Carlson,
Bret Baier,
Don Lemon,
Krystal Ball,
Margaret Hoover,
Megyn Kelly,
Chuck Todd,
Kaitlan Collins,
Mike Rowe,
John Stossel,
Michael Knowles,
Alex Jones,
Candace Owens,
Elon Musk,
Jordan Peterson,
Politico also described it as "the most always-on, always-available strategy of the 2024 presidential race." On May 24, the company issued a statement that they do not tolerate "misinformation, hate speech, violence or any form of abuse" on their platform. Ramaswamy stated that his lockout was censorship, and a showcase of "Typical Big Tech behavior: trying to cover their tracks after egregious election interference." On May 25, the company restored his account, stating that the lockout was "in error."
Polls On August 24, 2023, the
FiveThirtyEight average of multiple recent polls placed Ramaswamy third at 10.3% behind
Donald Trump (51.6%) and
Ron DeSantis (14.8%) among Republican voters. However, several polls showed Ramaswamy in second place, ahead of DeSantis. An August poll from
Cygnal had Ramaswamy in second place, with 11% support. On January 14, 2024, Ramaswamy polled fourth at 4.3%, behind Trump (60.4%), DeSantis (12.1), and Hayley (11.7%) in the
FiveThirtyEight average. Ramaswamy was frequently chosen as the second choice candidate among supporters of Trump in the primary, though slightly behind DeSantis. Several polls found Ramaswamy attracted close to 20% support from Republicans under the age of 40, while only 2-3% among those aged 65 or over.
Debates On July 21, 2023, Ramaswamy confirmed that he reached the minimum number of donors needed to appear at the first debate.
First debate: August 23, 2023 At the first
Republican presidential debate, Ramaswamy appeared alongside
Ron DeSantis,
Mike Pence,
Nikki Haley,
Chris Christie,
Tim Scott,
Asa Hutchinson, and
Doug Burgum. while
The New York Times opined that Ramaswamy "broke through." The
Associated Press likewise wrote that Vivek "overshadowed" DeSantis. The reporters of
Politico had mixed responses, variously citing Ramaswamy, Pence, and DeSantis as the winners.
The Hill declared Pence, Christie, and Haley the winners, while giving Ramaswamy a "mixed" performance, writing that "It seems near-certain that Ramaswamy is the candidate whose performance will most divide opinion."
Rich Lowry of
National Review opined that DeSantis, Ramaswamy, and Haley were the three top performing candidates.
Liz Peek of
Fox News felt that Ramaswamy was the worst performing candidate, while Haley was the best. Anthony Zurcher of
BBC News declared Ramaswamy the top winner, followed by Pence, and then Haley.
The Washington Post declared Trump (who did not appear), Ramaswamy, and Pence the debate's winners. Ramaswamy's performance was praised by competitors
Donald Trump and
Larry Elder, neither of whom appeared at the debate. Trump declared Ramaswamy the winner; while Elder, who did not qualify, praised Ramaswamy's response to
fatherless households in America. Following the debate, Ramaswamy topped
Google Trends and became the most searched for candidate. Ramaswamy received over one million
Google searches, while competitor Haley received around 100,000 comparatively. A post-debate poll, conducted by JL Partners, asked registered Republican voters who gave the best performance in the debate. Ramaswamy was the top candidate, with 28% selecting his performance as the best of the night. DeSantis closely followed with 27%, in addition to Pence with 13%, Scott with 8%, and Haley with 7%.
FiveThirtyEight also polled Republican voters, with 29% responding that DeSantis possessed the best performance, while 26% selected Ramaswamy.
Second debate: September 27, 2023 At the second
Republican presidential debate, Ramaswamy appeared alongside six competitors. All competitors from the first debate returned, except for Hutchinson. During the debate, Ramaswamy spoke the most, at over 12 minutes, and frequently interrupted or spoke over other candidates.
Canceled Fox News debate Ramaswamy was due to debate fellow Republican presidential candidate
Chris Christie on
Special Report with Bret Baier on
Fox News on October 3, 2023. However the
Republican National Committee (RNC) contacted Baier and threatened to ban Ramaswamy and Christie from attending future primary debates if they were to debate on Baier's show. Ramaswamy accused the RNC of conducting "a brokered and rigged nomination process."
Support of President Donald Trump While some candidates, including
Chris Christie and
Asa Hutchinson, openly criticize
former president Donald Trump throughout his
ongoing legal battles, Ramaswamy both defends Trump and levels unspecific criticism against the former president. Trump praised Ramaswamy for saying 'only...good things about me', and the two men have met several times. Ramaswamy called
Trump's indictment,
The People of the State of New York v. Donald J. Trump, "a national disaster." Regarding the 2023 jury verdict against Trump for
sexual abuse in
E. Jean Carroll vs. Donald J. Trump, Ramaswamy stated "this seems like just another part of the establishment's anaphylactic response." Following the
federal indictment of Donald Trump in June 2023, Ramaswamy vowed to give Trump a
presidential pardon if elected. After Trump's social media accounts were suspended following the
January 6 attack on the Capitol, Ramaswamy and
Jed Rubenfeld co-wrote a
Wall Street Journal op-ed that called the attack "disgraceful", but argued that social media websites should be treated as
state actors and that their ban of Trump violated the
First Amendment. Following the suspension of his campaign after the
2024 Iowa caucus, Ramaswamy formally endorsed
Trump's campaign.
Wikipedia edits Ramaswamy
paid an editor to alter his personal Wikipedia page to appear more favorable to political
conservatives before announcing his presidential campaign.
Forbes reported, May 2023:Anyone can make changes to Wikipedia articles, but it's against the rules for anyone to edit an article about themselves. It's within the rules to pay someone else to make changes on Wikipedia articles as long as those payments are disclosed. The changes to the Wikipedia page, first reported by Mediaite, were made by a user named Jhofferman, who provided the disclosure on Wikipedia.The paid editor removed references to his involvement with the
Ohio COVID-19 Response Team and his
Paul & Daisy Soros Fellowship for New Americans postgraduate fellowship. Other editors later restored the removed content, citing the report.
Paul and
Daisy Soros are the elder brother and sister-in-law of businessman and social activist
George Soros, who is the subject of numerous right-wing
conspiracy theories. Ramaswamy's campaign confirmed that it paid an editor, but denied trying to "
scrub" his Wikipedia page. A campaign spokesperson said the edits were revisions of "factual distortions" and blamed a
Ron DeSantis-aligned
super PAC for amplifying the story. == See also ==