Miami Mayor Francis Suarez became the first major GOP presidential candidate to drop out of the race this cycle, announcing Tuesday afternoon he was ending his campaign.
Here's a look at some of the numbers that defined his short-lived campaign:
75: That's how many days Suarez was an active candidate for the Republican presidential nomination. He launched his campaign on June 15.
0.2%: Suarez' average in national polls of the Republican primary, according to FiveThirtyEight.
0%: The portion of likely Iowa GOP caucusgoers who said Suarez was their first choice in the Republican primary, according to an August NBC News/Des Moines Register/Mediacom poll.
4%: The portion of likely Iowa GOP caucusgoers who said they were "actively considering" caucusing for Suarez, according to the same poll.
$945,450: How much Suarez's presidential campaign raised through June, the most recent filing period. The vast majority of that cash, more than $916,000, came from donors who gave at least $200, while less than $30,000 came from donors who gave under that amount.
$3.9 million: That's how much Suarez's campaign and his allied super PAC spent on ads of Tuesday, according to the ad tracking firm AdImpact. Almost all of that spending — nearly $3.8 million — came from the super PAC, SOS America. Suarez's campaign had just spent $110,000 on digital ads throughout his campaign.
$1.3 million: How much money SOS America raised during the first six months of the year, according to a campaign finance report filed with the Federal Election Commission.
24.5: How many minutes it took Suarez to run a 5K race, prompting the candidate to post on X, the site formally known as Twitter, "Name another presidential candidate who can place 6th in a 5k with a 24 and a half minute run time. Go."