Florida Gov. Ron DeSandis suspended his campaign for the Republican nomination Sunday on the eve of the New Hampshire primary.

De Sandys acknowledged Donald Trump’s lead.

“It’s clear to me that the majority of Republican voters want to give Donald Trump another chance,” he said in a video posted on X.

New Hampshire’s first primary will be Tuesday.

De Sandys entered the 2024 presidential race with significant advantages in his bid to take on Trump. Early primary polls showed de Sandys in a strong position to challenge the former president. He and his allies raised over $100 million in donations.

Now, De Sandys’ political future is in doubt, having suspended his presidential bid after just one election.

DeSandis’ departure means only Haley remains in the race, though she doesn’t appear to have much of a chance of unseating Trump. The winner will face Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic nominee, in the November election.

More than 7 in 10 Republicans have a favorable view of Trump, according to most polls. That put DeSandis in a difficult position, having to woo voters who still admire Trump and those who dislike him at the same time. It failed on both fronts. She never managed to explain to Trump supporters why she was a better choice than the former president, at a time when Haley was emerging as the favorite of moderate Republicans. And, while his politics differed from Trump’s, he adopted even more conservative positions on almost everything. In April, he signed a bill that banned Florida abortions after the sixth week of pregnancy while opposing military aid to Ukraine and taking punitive measures against the Walt Disney Co. after the company condemned the law that restricted the discussion of gender and sexuality in schools. The conflict with Disney was a battle he didn’t have to fight, his critics in the party point out.