Springfield News-Sun

Presidenti­al candidate Nikki Haley right to highlight immigrant roots

- Star Parker Star Parker is president of the Center for Urban Renewal and Education and host of the weekly television show “Cure America with Star Parker.”

The Republican Party’s newest presidenti­al candidate, former South Carolina Gov. and U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley, introduced herself by showcasing her roots as a child of immigrants.

Haley’s family, originally from India, immigrated to the United

States in 1969 and settled in a small, segregated town, Bamberg, South Carolina, where she was born three years later.

One can glean two reasons why Haley is spotlighti­ng her background and presenting her candidacy as a successful minority woman.

First, one doesn’t need to be “woke” to recognize the value of an Asian American woman running for president with an agenda of less government and more freedom.

Second, showcasing her story and success qualifies her to say, as she does in her introducti­on video, “Take it from me, America is not a racist country.”

The strategy has opened her to attacks and criticism from the right and the left. Ann Coulter, who still seethes at Haley for taking down the Confederat­e flag on South Carolina’s state Capitol grounds in Columbia, called her a “prepostero­us creature” and suggested she “go back to your own country and reconsider that history.”

But, of course, this is Haley’s “own country.” If it weren’t, she wouldn’t be able to run for president. But Coulter’s business is not facts but provoking an audience that buys her books.

More temperate advice came from The Wall

Street Journal, which suggested Haley must do a better job distinguis­hing herself from other Republican­s. No Republican, says the Journal, would disagree that “America is not a racist country.”

This is, of course, true. But I believe Haley is correct that it achieves particular resonance coming from an Indian American woman with a stellar resume of public service and achievemen­t.

The left’s answer to Ann Coulter, Whoopi Goldberg, told her audience, regarding Haley, that “there are things about our country that are not perfect and to pretend that it is and to pretend that nothing happened is ridiculous.”

But, of course, Haley did not say that our country is “perfect” or that “nothing happened.”

Perfection is not what defines our country or any place or anything in this world. What defines and makes our country unique is freedom. This is Haley’s point when she says, “Even on our worst day we are blessed to live in America.”

Here in our free country, Ann Coulter and Whoopi Goldberg get to speak their minds and not worry that they will disappear in the night, as they might in China or Iran.

More serious criticism comes from the left from Asian American author Wajahat Ali, who accuses Haley of brandishin­g the “model minority myth,” which he calls a tool of white supremacis­ts. That is, per Ali, they use the success stories “of some Asian Americans” as “a cudgel against Black people” who are “told by

GOP politician­s to stop blaming racism for their problems.”

Haley has only showcased her own story. But the picture regarding the phenomenal business success stories of American immigrants is not a “cudgel” but powerful testimony to the opportunit­ies for success and achievemen­t in America.

According to a 2022 study by the National Foundation for American Policy, “more than half (319 of 582) of America’s start-up companies valued at $1 billion or more” were founded by immigrants. Nearly “two-thirds of (billion-dollar) companies were founded or cofounded by an immigrant or the child of an immigrant.” And almost 80% of billion-dollar companies “have an immigrant founder or an immigrant in a key leadership role.” These include immigrants from India, Israel, U.K., Canada, China, France, Germany, Russia, Iran, Nigeria and many others.

My organizati­on, the Center for Urban Renewal and Education, covered Haley’s rollout event in Charleston. The palpable energy and excitement at the rally could be a sign that this campaign will pick up steam as more candidates enter the field. Welcome to Election 2024.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States