America
Vivek Ramaswamy drops out of 2024 Republican race to WH, endorses Trump

Washington, Jan 16
Indian-American tech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy announced that he is dropping out of the 2024 Republican presidential race, and endorsed former US President Donald Trump who won the crucial Iowa caucuses.
The 38-year-old biotech entrepreneur told his supporters on Monday night that he is ending campaign after a dismal finish in Iowa’s leadoff caucuses.
The political newbie and the youngest candidate in the presidential race was trailing on the distant fourth spot with seven per cent of the votes counted.
“As of this moment, we are going to suspend this presidential campaign. Earlier tonight I called Donald Trump to tell him that I congratulate him on his victory, and now going forward, you will have my full endorsement for the presidency," The Hill reported Ramaswamy as saying.
Trump, America’s twice-impeached former president facing more than 90 criminal charges, emerged triumphant in Iowa, solidifying his position as the frontrunner for the Republican nomination.
The Republican frontrunner, who has always praised Ramaswamy as a "smart guy" and a "very intelligent person", recently slammed the political newcomer as "very sly" and asked voters not get “duped†by his "deceitful campaign tricks".
Ramaswamy said he is not going to criticise Trump in response to his attack, which he called a "friendly fire".
Asserting that he is not a "Plan B person", Ramaswamy has ruled out the possibility of him being the Vice President, saying he would not do well in a number two position in August last year.
The exit of the anti-woke crusader, who launched his campaign bid in February 2023, comes not long after former New Jersey governor Chris Christie announced he was dropping his White House bid.
Huge Gurdon, editor-in-chief of conservative publication Washington Examiner, wrote that every presidential election throws up an "interesting candidate" who is "evidently intelligent, highly unconventional, and less like any of the others than they are like each other".
And Ramaswamy had become the "interesting candidate" of the 2024 election cycle.
Born to immigrant parents from India, he made millions as a pharmaceutical entrepreneur and wrote a book slamming woke to test the waters for a plunge into politics.
He was clearly the star of the first Republican debate as he forced himself into most of the conversation, which included sharp jabs from Christie, who said he sounded like ChatGPT.
Fellow Indian-American and Republican rival, Nikki Haley, called him a "scum" for bringing up her daughter's reference in a debate on TikTok.
She also said that Ramaswamy has "no foreign policy experience and it shows".

30 minutes ago
Australian study unlocks secrets of ancient life through fossil faeces

31 minutes ago
Nepal: Interim PM Karki has to rebuild public trust in governance

33 minutes ago
Afghan senior official slams Trump's remarks on Bagram airbase

34 minutes ago
Tech giants urge H-1B holders to stay in US after Trump's visa overhaul, ask those abroad to return to US

37 minutes ago
CoHNA celebrates end of DOJ investigation on BAPS temple

38 minutes ago
Not only US, several countries are restricting entry

40 minutes ago
US decision on H-1B visa fee hike likely to have humanitarian consequences: Govt

41 minutes ago
US experts warn Trump administration against undermining relationship with India: Report

3 hours ago
Our foreign policy, diplomacy have completely failed: Imran Masood slams govt after Prez Trump’s H-1B visa fee hike

3 hours ago
Congress criticises US President Trump, Centre's policies over H-1B visa fee hike

4 hours ago
Miami City Commission will open with hymns from Rig-Veda, Upanishads, Bhagavad-Gita

4 hours ago
The great American dream may now be too expensive to achieve

6 hours ago
Netizens react to Deepika Padukone's cryptic note: 'People matter more than success'