Weld ends long-shot bid for GOP nomination
Bill Weld ended his quixotic primary campaign against President Donald Trump on Wednesday after winning only a single delegate in the 2020 contest.
"While I am suspending my candidacy, I want to be clear that I am not suspending my commitment to the nation and to the democratic institutions that set us apart," Weld wrote in an email to supporters.
Weld, the former two-term Massachusetts governor, pitched himself as an anti-Trump, pro-choice former prosecutor who supported cutting taxes and combating climate change. He backed Trump's impeachment, and was among a handful of Republicans who ran for the nomination and dropped out over the course of the election cycle.
Weld won a single delegate in Iowa, but had trouble competing with Trump's popularity among the GOP base. Weld was also hampered by Republican rules that use a winner-take-all formula to award delegates, including in his native Massachusetts.
Weld's exit from the race means Trump is now the party's presumptive nominee — though it was never really in doubt. Trump amassed the number of delegates needed to win the party's nomination on Tuesday night after polls closed in Illinois, Arizona and Florida.
"Nobody motivates our base more than President Trump, as evidenced by the historic turnout we've seen in state after state this primary season," said RNC chair Ronna McDaniel said in a statement. "[We] are thrilled to have President Trump as our party’s presumptive nominee once again."
Weld ran for vice president as a Libertarian in 2016, alongside former presidential candidate Gary Johnson. In the days leading up to the general election in 2016, Weld encouraged voters to choose Democrat Hillary Clinton over Trump. The former Massachusetts governor re-registered as a Republican in 2019 to run for president.
Announcing the end of his campaign, Weld thanked his "tens of thousands of supporters and donors."
"I am intensely grateful to all the patriotic women and men who have stood with me and supported me during the past eleven months in our effort to bring better government to Washington, D.C.," Weld said.