Former President Donald Trump's the commanding front-runner right now in the latest polls in the 2024 GOP presidential nomination race, with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in second place, ahead of the rest of the large field of contenders.
After months of buildup and speculation, including multiple stops earlier this year in Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina, the first three states to lead off the GOP presidential nominating calendar, DeSantis in May formally joined the growing field of declared Republican candidates.
Here’s a look at the more than a dozen major candidates who've launched campaigns - starting with the former president and listed in the chronological order in which they declared their candidacies - and the dwindling list of potential contenders for the Republican nomination who may be gearing up - or are just mulling - a White House run in 2024.
Plus, a look at the Republicans whom pundits viewed as potential contenders - or who seriously considered running - who ultimately decided against launching campaigns.
TRUMP ONCE AGAIN OVERWHELMING WINS CPAC 2024 STRAW POLL
DONALD TRUMP
The 76-year-old former president became the first major Republican to declare his candidacy when he launched his third straight campaign for the White House in mid-November, soon after the 2022 midterm elections.
More than two years after leaving the White House following his 2020 election defeat at the hands of President Biden, Trump remains the most popular and influential politician in the Republican Party, and continues to be the overwhelming front-runner in the early 2024 GOP presidential nomination polls. In early March, Trump once again overwhelmingly won the straw poll at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC). The largest annual gathering of conservative leaders and activists has become a Trump-fest since the former president’s 2016 election.
But Trump’s taken plenty of incoming fire over his impact on the GOP’s lackluster performance in the midterms, received some unfavorable reviews following his mid-November campaign launch at his Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida, and has faced of criticism over controversial comments and actions in the past two months.
Since he declared his candidacy, the former president’s made three trips to New Hampshire, the state that holds the first primary and second overall contest in the GOP presidential nominating calendar. He's also campaigned in Iowa, whose caucuses lead off the Republican schedule, and he's made on stop in South Carolina, which votes third.
Trump had dominated the 2024 spotlight, thanks in part to his indictment and early April arraignment in New York City, which made him the first former president in U.S. history to be charged with a crime.
Trump was indicted for allegedly falsifying business records related to hush money payments to adult film actress Stormy Daniels in 2016 to keep her quiet ahead of that year’s presidential election over her claims she had had sexual encounters years earlier with Trump. The former president denies sleeping with Daniels and denies falsifying business records to keep the payment concealed. The president pleaded not guilty at his April 4 arraignment to 34 felony counts of falsifying business records.
The indictment fueled Trump's fundraising - his campaign touted that the former president hauled in $15.4 million in the first two weeks after the news broke on March 30. And it's padded his lead over DeSantis and the rest of the emerging field of rivals in the latest 2024 Republican nomination polls.
In May, a federal jury in a civili case in New York City found Trump liable for sexually abusing writer E. Jean Carroll in an upscale Manhattan department store nearly three decades ago, but not liable for the rape Carroll accused Trump of committing.
The jury concluded within a couple of hours that Trump was also liable for defamation and awarded Carroll nearly $5 million in damages for her battery and defamation claims..
Trump has repeatedly denied the allegation from Carroll, calling her a "wack job," and her claims a "fake story."
The former president's numerous legal controversies have not put any dents to date in his commanding lead in the polls.
NIKKI HALEY
Former two-term South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, who later served as ambassador to the United Nations in the Trump administration, launched her presidential campaign in February in her hometown of Charleston before heading straight out onto the campaign trail in New Hampshire and Iowa.
Haley’s been going on the attack — both against President Biden and the Democrats as well as members of her own party. At a major donor retreat in March Haley blasted both parties — including Trump — for massive government spending that contributed to an exploding national debt.
HALEY BLASTS BOTH DEMOCRATS AND FELLOW REPUBLICANS OVER EXPLODING NATIONAL DEBT
"I’m not afraid to call BS on all the bailouts and handouts that are bankrupting America. And I’m not afraid to call out my fellow Republicans," the 51-year-old Haley said.
VIVEK RAMASWAMY
Vivek Ramaswamy, a health care and tech sector entrepreneur, best-selling author, conservative commentator, and crusader in the culture wars, declared his candidacy in late February.
The 37-year-old Ramaswamy, author of "Woke, Inc.: Inside Corporate America's Social Justice Scam," says his vision centers on restoring the "national identity in America." He repeatedly called for the scrapping of the FBI and the Department of Education and has said he’d repeal federal affirmative action on his first day in the White House.
The multi-millionaire candidate told Fox News Digital earlier this year that he’s "making a big personal investment" in his campaign.
PERRY JOHNSON
Businessman Perry Johnson declared his candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination in early March.
Perry, who last year ran for the 2022 GOP gubernatorial nomination in Michigan, was considered a top contender before he and four other Republican hopefuls were disqualified because of invalid signatures.
Earlier this year the 75-year-old Johnson signaled his White House ambitions by spending big bucks to run an ad during the Super Bowl targeting Iowa voters and showcasing his pledge to cut federal spending by 2% per year.
Johnson's made two swings through Iowa and one in New Hampshire since lauching his campaign.
LARRY ELDER
Conservative radio talk show host and former California gubernatorial candidate Larry Elder jumped into the race for the White House in April, announcing his candidacy in a live interview on Fox News.
"America is in decline, but this decline is not inevitable. We can enter a new American Golden Age, but we must choose a leader who can bring us there. That's why I'm running for President," Elder wrote in an accompanying statement.
Elder, a longtime conservative commentator and popular nationally syndicated radio host, easily topped the field of replacement candidates in California’s gubernatorial recall election in September 2021 that Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom convincingly survived. Elder passed on taking on Newsom a second time when the governor easily won reelection last year in the heavily blue state.
The former attorney and author had been flirting with a White House run for months, saying on numerous occasions that he was "very likely going to run for president," with an announcement coming in the early spring.
ASA HUTCHINSON
Former two-term Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson formally declared his candidacy for president at an event Bentonville, Arkansas on April 26.
"Bentonville holds a special place in my heart and my story," Hutchinson told Fox News Digital ahead of his campaign launch. "I have experienced many firsts here: my first law practice, launching Bentonville's first FM radio station, my first home with Susan, and announcing my first run for public office. I owe so much to Bentonville, it is only right to make my formal announcement among my many friends and supporters from this amazing community."
A former federal attorney turned two-term congressman who served as Drug Enforcement Administration administrator and Department of Homeland Security undersecretary during then-President George W. Bush’s administration, Hutchinson has become a vocal GOP Trump critic.
TIM SCOTT
Saying that he will "never back down in defense of the conservative values that make America exceptional," Republican Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina took a major step towards running for the White House as he launched a presidential exploratory committee in mid-April.
Showcasing his message of faith, hope, and unity, Scott emphasized in a video that was shared first with Fox News that "this is the fight we must win. And that will take faith. Faith in God, faith in each other, and faith in America."
Scott, who notes that he "was raised by a single mother in poverty," is a rising star in the GOP and the only Black Republican in the Senate. He charges that Democrats "weaponize race to divide us to hold onto their power," and highlighted that "when I fought back against their liberal agenda they called me a prop. A token. Because I disrupt their narrative. I threaten their control. They know the truth of my life disproves their lies."
The 57-year-old Scott campaigned in Iowa and New Hampshire immediately after he launched his presidential exploratory committee. A ferocious fundraiser, the senator nearly $22 million in his campaign coffers at the beginning of the year, which could be transferred to a presidential campaign.
Scott filed paperwork with the Federal Election Commission in mid-May, which officially launched his presidential campaign. And the senator formally declared his candidacy at an event in his hometown of North Charleston, South Carolina on May 22.
RON DESANTIS
Saying that he's "running for president to lead our great American comeback," Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida formally launched his White House campaign in a video released by his political team on Wednesday, May 24.
Florida’s governor, who saw his popularity soar among conservatives across the country over the past three years due to his forceful pushback against coronavirus pandemic restrictions and his aggressive actions as a culture warrior going after media, corporations and teachers unions, won an overwhelming 19-point re-election victory in November.
DeSantis has showcased that his wins as governor have "transformed" Florida from a top general election battleground "into the nation’s leading red state," and that his policy victories in Florida can serve as a roadmap for the entire nation.
The 44-year-old governor racked up conservative victories - including a controversial six-week abortion ban, tougher immigration laws, restrictions on gender and diversity instruction in schools, and green-lighting the ability to carry a concealed weapon without a permit - during Florida's recently concluded legislative session, courtesy of a GOP super majority in Tallahassee.
But the governor’s agenda in Florida didn't prevent him from traveling across the country as he highlighted his "Florida blueprint" and promoted his newly released book, "The Courage to Be Free." And he's beefed up his political staff at his homebase in Tallahassee.
DESANTIS AIMING FOR MORE CONSERVATIVE VICTORIES IN FLORIDA
DeSantis last year routinely dismissed talk of a 2024 White House run, but dropped plenty of hints following his re-election victory. But the governor’s travel itinerary, which took him multiple times to Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina, sparked more speculation about an increasingly likely White House run.
Trump and his allies repeatedly targeted DeSantis starting last autumn, and stepped up the attacks in recent months.
DeSantis has mostly refrained from responding, but he appeared to verbally swipe at the former president, who's been criticized for contributing to the GOP's less than stellar overall performance in last year's elections.
"There is no substitute for victory. Republicans need to the shake the culture of losing that has developed throughout our party in recent years. The time for excuses is over. We must get it done once and for all," DeSantis at a keynote address on April 14 to a sold out crowd at a state GOP fundraising gala in New Hampshire
DeSantis, who has been criticized for not excelling at the art of candidate-to-voter interactions and retail style politics, which are traditions in Iowa and New Hampshire, spent roughly an hour after his speech in New Hampshire, walking the ballroom and greeting the crowd. It was a repeat performance of his interactions with Republicans during his two stops in Iowa in March. And he made a handful of retail stops during his return visits to both states in May.
Along with his video launch, DeSantis also filed with the Federal Election Commission (FEC) ahead of a gathering in Miami, Florida the following day with top donors and bundlers.
DeSantis set a gubernatorial fundraising record last cycle, and had $110 million cash on hand in his fundraising committees at the start of the spring. Much of that money could likely be transferred to Never Back Down, a super PAC backing the expected DeSantis presidential campaign, which has pledged to spend $200 million.
MIKE PENCE
Former Vice President Mike Pence, Trump’s running mate in 2016 and 2020, has repeatedly said that Republican voters will have "better choices" than the former president in 2024.
Pence spent last autumn and the first couple of months of 2023 crisscrossing the country on a book tour for his new memoir "So Help Me God," in which he showcased successes of the Trump-Pence administration, but also spotlights criticisms of Trump that have generated plenty of headlines. That tour, and other trips, have taken him numerous times to the early voting states.
The 63-year-old former vice president emphasized that the positive response he’s said he’s receiving from his new autobiography "has been very encouraging" as he weighs a 2024 bid.
Pence filed paperwork with the FEC during the first week of June to officially trigger his presidential campaign, with a formal announcement following days later.
The former congressman turned Indiana governor, who has long been a champion for social conservative voters, appears to be making a play for evangelical voters with meetings earlier this year with some of the right’s most influential pastors.
And he's scheduled to formally declare his candidacy on Wednesday in Iowa, where evangelical voters play an outsized role in Republican presidential politics.
PENCE REVEALS HIS POTENTIAL 2024 ADVANTAGE
Pence pledged in a recent Fox News Digital interview that "we’ll have the resources to tell our story and my hope is..that by the time people are making decision, we won’t just be well known, we’ll be known well. They’ll know who the Pences are. They’ll know what our values are, our sense of calling, and I’m confident we can do that."
CHRIS CHRISTIE
It's take two for former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who in early June launched his second campaign for the GOP presidential nomination.
Christie predicts that in a 2024 Republican primary battle race that's shaping up to be combustible, "it’s not going to end nicely" for Trump.
And Christie, a former two-term Republican governor and 2016 presidential contender argued that he’s got the debate chops to potentially take down Trump should he face off with the former president.
Christie made his comments during two trips to New Hampshire in the spring. And he returned to the Granite State in early June to formally declare his candidacy.
Christie, who is considered one of the best communicators in the GOP and was known during his tenure for the kind of in-your-face politics that Trump has also mastered, was asked by Fox News after the town hall if he thought any of the other actual or potential contenders in the emerging Republican presidential field also had the debate skills to effectively take on Trump.
"I don’t know the answer to that question but what I would say is no one has to wonder if I do," the former governor emphasized.
DOUG BURGUM
Two-term North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, a former software company CEO, jumped into the race for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination in early June.
Burgum teased his expected launch in a campaign style video first reported by Fox News that described him as a "small town boy turned self-made, world-class business leader" and "a new leader for a changing economy" in a video released ahead of his expected Republican presidential campaign launch this week.
Burgum steered his one-time small business, Great Plains Software, into a $1 billion software company. His business — and its North Dakota-based workers — were eventually acquired by Microsoft, and Burgum stayed on board as a senior vice president.
And in 2016, the then first-time candidate and long shot convincingly topped a favored GOP establishment contender to secure the Republican nomination in North Dakota before going on to a landslide victory in the gubernatorial general election in the solidly red state. Burgum was overwhelmingly re-elected in 2020 to a second term as governor.
Burgum is not known well outside of North Dakota and is considered a dark-horse contender in a field of actual and expected candidates with much higher name identification.
But Burgum entered the 2024 presidential race as one of the wealthiest members of the Republican field along with multi-millionaire entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy and former President Donald Trump. He quickly went up with ads in Iowa and New Hampshire.
FRANCIS SUAREZ
Mayor Francis Suarez of Miami in early June became the third Republican from Florida to enter race for the Republican presidential nomination.
With stops in Iowa in March and New Hampshire in April, Suarez had been sparking plenty of speculation about a White House run.
And days before he launched his campaign in early June, Suarez teased a run on "Fox News Sunday," saying he was going to make a "major announcement" in the coming days.
Suarez, whose father, Xavier Suarez, was Miami’s first-ever Cuban-American mayor, was overwhelmingly elected mayor in 2017 and convincingly re-elected in 2021.
Suarez is the first major Hispanic candidate to join the 2024 presidential race.
Ahead of his filing, a super PAC backing his bid went up with a video in the early voting states touting Suarezls leadership in Miami in tackling crime.
WILL HURD
Former GOP Rep. Will Hurd, a one-time CIA officer from Texas who served three terms in Congress before deciding against running for re-election in 2020, launched his Republican presidential campaign in late June.
Hurd, who was the only Black Republican in the House during his tenure in Congress from 2015 to 2021, is a vocal Republican critic of Trump,
Hurd reiterated in a recent Fox News Digital interview that he won’t sign the pledge to support the eventual GOP 2024 nominee which the Republican National Committee is mandating that all candidates sign in order to make the stage at the first debate in August, which Fox News is hosting.
While Hurd’s decision – due to his opposition to Trump - could jeopardize his ability to make the debate stage, he stressed "I just can’t lie to the American people in order to earn a microphone. It would be for me to say ‘yeah, I’ll do it,’ and then not support at the end. But I just can’t lie to people about that."
GLENN YOUNGKIN
Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s 2021 election victory — he was the first Republican to win a gubernatorial election in Virginia in a dozen years — energized the GOP. And last year he was a politician in demand on the campaign trail, crisscrossing the country on behalf of fellow Republicans.
Youngkin, 56, has repeatedly reiterated that he’s focused right now on his 2023 agenda for Virginia, and on flipping the state Senate from blue to red in this year’s elections in Virginia. But he faced a setback in his policy push for a 15-week abortion ban when Democrats captured a GOP held state senate seat in a special election earlier this year, increasing their razor-thin majority.
When asked on May 1 by the Wall Street Journal if he'll head out on the presidential campaign trail this year, the governor answered "no."
However, Youngkin did not appear to directly rule out a 2024 presidential bid. And a campaign style video he releated in mid-May sparked further speculation about his national ambitions.
LIZ CHENEY
Former Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming has repeatedly vowed to do "whatever it takes to keep Donald Trump out of the Oval Office."
Cheney, a longtime Trump critic who was stripped of her House GOP leadership position and last summer routed in the Republican primary in her bid for renomination by a Trump backed challenger, was a co-chair of the Democrat-dominated Jan. 6 select committee that in its final report recommended barring the former president from ever holding office again.
Cheney, 56, has mulled a presidential bid in order to directly take on Trump, but has said she hasn’t "made a decision yet about what I'm going to do."
JOHN BOLTON
Former national security adviser John Bolton, who served under Trump, has been weighing a Republican presidential run since December.
That's when he told Fox News he was "prepared" to get into the White House race if other potential Republican contenders didn't "repudiate" controversial comments Trump had made days earlier suggesting the "termination" of parts of the U.S. Constitution in order to "throw the Presidential Election Results of 2020 OUT."
"I view it really as roughly equivalent to saying he [Trump] wants to overthrow the government," Bolton argued at the time.
The74-year-old Bolton has a long history serving in Republican administrations, from working in the Justice Department under then-President Ronald Reagan and the State Department under then-President George H.W. Bush.
As a leading State Department official during former President George W. Bush's administration, he was a strong proponent of the Iraq War. He later served as ambassador to the United Nations during Bush's second term.
Bolton, who's long been known as a foreign policy hawk and advocate of U.S. military action overseas, called for the scrapping of the Iran nuclear deal signed during the Obama administration.
Bolton tested the presidential waters in the 2016 cycle with trips to Iowa and New Hampshire, the first two states to vote in the GOP’s presidential nominating calendar. But he eventually decided against making a White House run.
MIKE ROGERS
Former Rep. Mike Rogers of Michigan, who along with his wife formed a group called "Lead America" to try to remedy the growing discouragement with politics and find solutions to national problems, road tested his message and his suggested solutions for months with trips across the country, including with stops in Iowa and New Hampshire.
"I think it’s important to get here to have this discussion of ideas about the future of the country with people who are going to have an outsized impact on what happens in 2024," Rogers stressed.
When asked about his 2024 timetable, Rogers told Fox News he will jump into the race "if I can get to that point where people are really ready for those hard solutions, and creative solutions, and innovative solutions, and an optimistic position for our future."
But as spring progressed into summer, Rogers appeared to move his 2024 focus to Michigan's open Senate seat.
KRISTI NOEM
Gov. Kristi Noem, a conservative congresswoman who spent eight years in the House of Representatives before winning South Dakota’s governorship in 2018, was overwhelming re-elected in November in the reliably red state.
Pundits view Noem, 51, as a possible contender for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination, or as a potential running mate.
"I’m focused on doing my job here in South Dakota," Noem said when Fox News Digital asked earlier this year whether she’s mulling a White House run.
But she also said that "I’m focused here, but I’m going to continue telling South Dakota’s stories," adding "that’s a story that I think can bring hope to the rest of the country."
GREG ABBOTT
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott topped Democratic challenger Beto O’Rourke — a former congressman who unsuccessfully ran for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination — by 11 points in November, his third straight double-digit gubernatorial victory in the reliably red state.
Thanks to his actions on immigration, abortion and a host of other issues, he’s become very visible and popular with conservatives across the country.
Asked in a Fox News Digital interview earlier this year about a possible 2024 presidential run, the governor emphasized that "my primary focus right now is to maintain those conservative principles and policies for the state of Texas and do my part to expand them across the country. But for the next six months, I’ve got to get these policies passed for the state of Texas to ensure that we put our state on a pathway for not just the next four years but for [the] next 40 years."
Asked if he’s not ruling out a potential White House run, the 65-year-old Abbott said, "I think a more accurate way to say it is it’s not something I’m ruling in right now. I’m focused on Texas, period."
CRUZ, (RICK) SCOTT, POMPEO, HOGAN AND SUNUNU STAYING ON SIDELINES
As political prognosticators speculate about who may still run, three potential contenders whom pundits had viewed as likely candidates have declined to run.
Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, the runner-up to Trump in the combustible 2016 GOP presidential nomination race, is running for re-election in the Senate next year, and is already gearing up for what may become a bruising battle.
CRUZ SAYS HIS 2024 RE-ELECTION WILL BE A ‘FIREFIGHT’
While he has repeatedly said that "when I ran in ’16, it was the most fun I’ve had in my life," the senator is clearly passing on any 2024 presidential bid. And two of his top outside politcial advisers are now helping DeSantis.
But Cruz doesn’t rule a future White House run, telling Fox News Digital in March that "there is a season for everything. I can tell you this. I am 52 years old. And life is long, and I intend to be in this fight for as long as there is breath in my body."
Sen. Rick Scott, a former two-term Florida governor who this past cycle chaired the Senate GOP campaign committee, has already started ramping up his 2024 re-election campaign.
But some political pundits still view Scott, a former health care executive who’s the wealthiest member of the Senate, as a possible White House contender.
Fueling more speculation was an ad Scott went up with earlier this year with an ad where he calls for "change" the Republican Party. The seven-figure ad blitz, which was first reported by Fox News, didn't run just in Florida, but from coast to coast on national cable TV.
While the 70-year-old Scott virtually headlined a weekly gathering of top conservative leaders and activists in New Hampshire earlier this year, it's unlikely he'll change course and launch a presidential campaign.
POMPEO ANNOUNCES 2024 DECISION ON FOX NEWS
Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, a Fox News contributor, Army veteran, and former congressman from Kansas who later served as CIA director and America's top diplomat in the Trump administration, announced during an appearance on Fox News' "Special Report" in April that "this isn't our moment."
HOGAN PASSES ON 2024 BID IN ORDER TO AVOID CANDIDATE ‘PILEUP’
And former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan announced in March he won’t seek for the Republican presidential nomination in 2024. Hogan, a vocal GOP critic of former President Donald Trump who in January was term-limited after eight years in office, worried that his candidacy in a potentially packed presidential primary field could help Trump win the nomination.
"I want to avoid what we saw in 2016 where we had so many candidates all fighting over… a limited chunk of votes and Donald Trump became the nominee," Hogan said on Fox News’ "Your World with Neil Cavuto."
New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu, who is in his fourth two-year term steering the key general election battleground state that also holds the second contest in the GOP presidential nominating calendar, had been seriously mulling a White House bid for over a year.
But in early June, Sununu announced that he would pass on launching a presidential campaign.
"I've taken the last six months to look at things, where everything is, and I've made the decision not to run for president on the Republican ticket in 2024," Sununu said Monday in an interview on CNN and in an opinion piece in the Washington Post.
Sununu didn't say if he'd seek re-election next year for what would be an unprecedented fifth term as New Hampshire governor.
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The conventional wisdom is that the expanding field only helps Trump as he seeks a third straight GOP presidential nomination.
Sununu, reiterating what he told Fox News Digital in a recent interview, said as he announced that he wouldn't run that "given where the polls are right now, every candidate needs to understand the responsibility of getting out, and getting out quickly if it's not working. And I can be more candid about that as the governor of the first-in-the-nation primary calling candidates out, saying ‘look you gave it a try. You’re still in low single digits. You gotta get out of the race."