November 23, 2024
Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley has a certain look when she’s grappling with criticism. She locks her expression into place, waiting for the storm to be over. We have seen this several times during the GOP primary debates, including at least twice when fellow contender Vivek Ramaswamy attacked Haley on...

Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley has a certain look when she’s grappling with criticism. She locks her expression into place, waiting for the storm to be over.

We have seen this several times during the GOP primary debates, including at least twice when fellow contender Vivek Ramaswamy attacked Haley on Dec. 6.

The former South Carolina governor just stood there, frozen-faced, as she processed the remarks and calculated her next move.

Trending:

Democratic Lawmaker Interrupts Kamala Harris’ Speech, Yells at Vice President

At a town hall Wednesday in Newport, New Hampshire, Haley did it again in response to a comment no Republican presidential candidate wants to hear.

The voter in the audience superseded his unsavory comparison with an explanation of how he hadn’t originally intended to be at the event. Haley surely would have preferred he’d stayed home too, given the grave impact of his words.

“You sound really good,” the man said. “You’re a strong speaker. Some of your policies I do agree with. You sound like a Democrat sometimes. Sorry about that.”

Haley locked her expression into position as she absorbed the blow and rallied to figure out what to do with it.

[embedded content]

The comment came one day after Haley received New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu’s endorsement.

Sununu is one of the few governors left in New England who isn’t a Democrat — although he, like Haley, sometimes sounds like one.

Just as Haley has mastered the art of “conspicuous in-betweens,” as Politico put it, so has Sununu.

Related:

CNN’s Iowa GOP Debate Blowing Up in Network’s Face? It May Not Even Happen Now

Both have sharply criticized the Republican front-runner, former President Donald Trump.

In an eye-opening interview on “The View” six months ago, Sununu declared that Trump “won’t be the nominee.”

[embedded content]

For her part, Haley — who served in Trump’s administration as U.N. ambassador — has described the prospect of another Trump term as “four years of chaos, vendettas and drama.”

On Wednesday, the campaign of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis — who is in the No. 2 spot in the GOP primary race between Trump and Haley, according to the RealClearPolitics polling aggregate — shared a montage explaining all about the Democrat living inside of Haley, beginning with how she admittedly got into politics because of Hillary Clinton.

As Politico said of Haley in a February profile, “She was a Trump critic who became a Trump appointee who now officially is a Trump rival. Throughout her compelling, nearly two-decade-long political ascent, she has been nimble, or as her critics would say, uncommonly calculating.”

Thus as it now suits her, the former governor seems to have staked out the GOP establishment/anti-Trump position in the primary race — with the support of some Democrats.

Last week, Reid Hoffman, the co-founder of LinkedIn and a prominent Democratic donor, gave $250,000 to a super PAC supporting Haley.

The move reveals just how in line Haley’s strategy is with Democrats as well as how much Hoffman hates Trump. According to CNN, supporting her “represents the first of just two opportunities to stop Donald Trump from winning the White House again.”

Will you vote for Haley in the GOP primaries?

Yes: 4% (15 Votes)

No: 96% (372 Votes)

“Nikki Haley would not be as good for America as Joe Biden,” Hoffman said, “but America would survive her administration.”

He is joined by another heavyweight, JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon, who last month urged big-bucks donors to back Haley.

“Even if you’re a very liberal Democrat, I urge you, help Nikki Haley too,” Dimon said, according to Bloomberg.

That New Hampshire voter wasn’t off-base in his assessment of Haley sounding like a Democrat — so much so that she has won the support of Democratic donors.

The former governor probably wasn’t expecting to be called out for her chameleon-like ways. But the American people are hardly naive. They see when something obvious is hiding in plain sight. There is purple blood tainting the red stream. And they’ve run out of time to mince words.


An Urgent Note from Our Staff:

The Western Journal has been labeled “dangerous” simply because we have a biblical worldview and speak the truth about what is happening in America.

We refuse to let Big Tech and woke advertisers dictate the content we share with our community. We stand for truth. We stand for freedom. We stand with our readers.

We’re asking you to help us in this fight. We can’t do this without you.

Your donation directly helps fund our editorial team of writers and editors. If you would rather become a WJ member outright, you can do that today as well. Your support means we can continue to expose false narratives and defend traditional American values.

Please stand with us by donating today.

Thank you for your support!