Springfield News-Sun

Haley kicks off her campaign for White House

- By Meg Kinnard and Michelle L. Price

CHARLESTON, S.C. — Republican Nikki Haley launched her 2024 presidenti­al campaign on Wednesday, betting that her boundary-breaking career as a woman and person of color who governed in the heart of the South before representi­ng the U.S. on the world stage can overcome entrenched support for her onetime boss, former President Donald Trump.

Haley, a former South Carolina governor and United Nations ambassador, made her first appearance in public as a White House hopeful in the historic coastal city of Charleston, casting herself as a figure for generation­al change who can help the party win the White House again.

“If you’re tired of losing, put your trust in a new generation,” Haley said.

She leaned heavily on her experience at the U.N., her background as the child of Indian immigrants and spoke in hopeful terms about the country, saying, “Take it from me, America is not a racist country.”

The event was also an early attempt to display strength in her home state, which holds a critical early primary that influences the fate of the GOP nomination. Early Wednesday, Rep. Ralph Norman — whom Trump backed in the 2022 midterm elections — became the first House member from South Carolina to publicly endorse Haley.

Norman introduced Haley, comparing her to conservati­ve icon and former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and alluded to Haley being an heir to Trump, saying the former president had been the right leader at the time he came onto the scene in 2016.

Several hundred people had filed into a opensided metal-roofed structure known as “The Shed” adjacent to Charleston’s visitors center, an hour ahead of Haley’s speech. Campaign signs and American flags dotted the crowd, with hype music playing from a bank of speakers.

Retiree Connie Campbell said she was all in for the former governor, whom she said has “got so much to offer.”

“She’s very experience­d in politics and as a family person, a mother, a wife,” said Campbell, noting her admiration for the way Haley led South Carolina through tragedies including the Charleston shooting. “She had a lot to go through as our governor.”

Haley released a video on Tuesday declaring her candidacy, making her the first major Republican to officially challenge Trump, but she will hardly be the last. Florida Gov. Ron Desantis, former Vice President Mike

Pence and former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo are among those expected to launch campaigns in the coming months. Haley’s fellow South Carolinian Sen. Tim Scott is also weighing a White House bid.

As the presidenti­al primary season comes into focus, the biggest question is whether anyone in the field will be able to replace Trump at the top of a party that he transforme­d with his first campaign in 2016. He remains popular with a wide swath of voters who will have significan­t sway in the primary, though some party officials have blamed him for the GOP’S lackluster performanc­e in last year’s midterms. As it did in 2016, a crowded field could work to Trump’s advantage, allowing him to march to the nomination while his opponents divide support among themselves.

Haley, 51, made only a passing reference to the 76-year-old former president, noting he nominated her as his ambassador to the United Nations.

She leaned heavily on her time tangling with world leaders, along with her arguments about it being time for a leadership change in America.

“Today our enemies think that the American era has passed. They’re wrong. America is not past our prime. It’s just that our politician­s are past theirs,” she said.

There appears to be openness among Republican­s for fresh faces, according to a new poll from The Associated PRESS-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. In an open-ended question asking Republican­s to choose who they want to lead their party, a majority of Republican­s didn’t choose either Trump or Desantis, considered the former president’s top rival. But they also didn’t have a clear alternativ­e in mind. Eleven other politician­s, including Haley, were named by just 1% of Republican­s as their preferred leader.

Haley addressed Republican­s with some tough talk, saying the party has lost the popular vote in seven of the last eight presidenti­al elections and that should prompt a new approach.

 ?? AP ?? Nikki Haley launches her 2024 presidenti­al campaign Wednesday in South Carolina.
AP Nikki Haley launches her 2024 presidenti­al campaign Wednesday in South Carolina.

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