Former President Donald Trump won the New Hampshire Republican primary.
Trump led Haley by 54.6% to 43.2% with slightly more than 90% of the expected votes counted as of 7 a.m. ET.
The former president's victory over former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley was widely anticipated, but it raised new questions about whether or not the Republican race for the presidential nomination was over.
In a speech very soon after networks projected Trump's victory, Haley insisted she did not intend to drop out of the race. "What a great night," she proclaimed to a crowd of cheering fans.

Speaking in Nashua, Trump struck a very different note Tuesday from the relatively gracious victory speech he gave the week before, in Iowa.
"Let's not have somebody take a victory when she had a very bad night," Trump said of Haley. "She had a very bad night."
In broader Haley world, there were concerns among some of her donors about what happens next.
"I just had one donor text me who has raised over $100k for Haley who just told me they are done. It's over. I'm sure there more as the night goes," said a Republican fundraiser, who was granted anonymity in order to speak freely about what he's hearing from clients.
The fundraiser also said he was hearing from Haley campaign financiers who are looking for an exit.
Meanwhile, on the Democratic side, President Joe Biden won his party's New Hampshire primary as a write-in candidate, after his name was not included on the printed ballot.
New Hampshire Secretary of State David Scanlan said he expected turnout would exceed 400,000, with the lion's share of those ballots being cast in the Republican primary.
CNBC reporters covered the primary results from New Hampshire, Washington, D.C. and New York.