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Nikki Haley
Nikki Haley
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Nimarata Nikki Randhawa Haley[3][4][5] (née Randhawa; born January 20, 1972)[1][2][6] is an American politician and diplomat who served as the 116th governor of South Carolina from 2011 to 2017 and as the 29th U.S. ambassador to the United Nations from January 2017 to December 2018.[7] A Republican, Haley is the first Indian American to serve in a presidential cabinet.[8] She came in second in the 2024 Republican Party presidential primaries after Donald Trump.

Key Information

Haley joined her family's clothing business before serving as treasurer and then president of the National Association of Women Business Owners. She was elected to the South Carolina House of Representatives in 2004 and served three terms. She was elected governor of South Carolina in 2010, making her the state's first female governor and the second U.S. governor of Indian descent, after Bobby Jindal of Louisiana. During her time as governor, she received national attention for leading the state's response to the 2015 Charleston church shooting.[9][10][11]

In January 2017, Haley became the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations in the administration of Donald Trump.[12] As U.N. ambassador, Haley was notable for her advocacy for Israel, her defense of the Trump administration's withdrawal of the U.S. from the Iran nuclear deal and the Paris climate agreement, and her withdrawal of the U.S. from the United Nations Human Rights Council. She stepped down as ambassador on December 31, 2018.[13]

Haley announced her campaign for President of the United States in February 2023.[14] After the Iowa caucuses, Haley and Trump became the only remaining major candidates in the Republican primaries.[15] She campaigned directly against Trump for almost two months. She became the first female Republican presidential candidate to win a presidential primary, and the second woman of color to win a major party nominating contest, after Shirley Chisholm in 1972,[16] with her victory in the Washington DC primary.[17][18] After losing in all of the Super Tuesday contests, with the exception of Vermont, Nikki Haley suspended her campaign on March 6, 2024. On April 15, the Hudson Institute announced Haley would join the think tank as the next Walter P. Stern Chair.[19]

Early life

[edit]
Haley's 1989 high school yearbook photo

Haley was born Nimarata Nikki Randhawa at Bamberg County Memorial Hospital in Bamberg, South Carolina,[1][2][20] to immigrant Punjabi Sikh parents from Amritsar, Punjab, India.[21][22] Before moving to North America, her father, Ajit Singh Randhawa (1933–2024),[23] was a professor at Punjab Agricultural University,[24] and her mother, Raj Kaur Randhawa (1936–2025),[25] received her law degree from the University of Delhi.[26] They had an arranged marriage and moved in 1964 when Ajit accepted a PhD program scholarship from the University of British Columbia.[27][28] After Ajit graduated in 1969, he began as a professor at Voorhees College, a historically black institution, and the family settled in South Carolina.[29][30] Raj earned a master's degree in education and taught social studies in the Bamberg Public Schools for seven years. She founded a successful women's boutique, Exotica International, where she began to work full time.[31][32] Nikki began assisting with bookkeeping when she was 12. The business expanded to menswear in 1993, with The Gentlemen's Quarters, and both stores remained open until Raj retired in 2008.[33][34][26]

Haley has two brothers and a sister.[35] She attended Orangeburg Preparatory Schools, graduating in 1989.[36] She graduated from Clemson University in 1994 with a B.S. degree in accounting and finance.[37][38][39] Haley has been known by her middle name, Nikki, a Punjabi name meaning "little one", since she was born.[40]

Early career

[edit]

After graduating from college, Haley worked for FCR Corporation, a waste management and recycling company, before joining her family's clothing business as its bookkeeper[41] and chief financial officer.[42] After she married Michael Haley in 1996,[43] she became active in civic affairs. In 1998, she was named to the board of directors of the Orangeburg County Chamber of Commerce. She was named to the board of directors of the Lexington Chamber of Commerce in 2003. Haley became treasurer of the National Association of Women Business Owners in 2003, and president in 2004.[44]

Haley chaired the Lexington Gala to raise funds for a local hospital.[45] She also served on the Lexington Medical Foundation, Lexington County Sheriff's Foundation, and West Metro Republican Women.[46] She was the president of the South Carolina Chapter of the National Association of Women Business Owners, and was chair for the 2006 Friends of Scouting Leadership Division campaign.[47]

South Carolina House of Representatives (2005–2011)

[edit]

Campaigns

[edit]

In 2004, Haley ran for the South Carolina House of Representatives to represent District 87 in Lexington County. She ran in the Republican primary on a platform of education reform and property tax relief.[48][49] Initially, she ran because she believed that incumbent Republican state representative Larry Koon, who was the longest-serving legislator in the South Carolina Statehouse at the time, was not going to seek reelection, but Koon entered the race just before the filing deadline.[50]

In the primary election, Koon received 42 percent of the vote, Haley received 40 percent, and David Perry received 17 percent.[51] As no candidate received a majority of the vote (50 percent or higher), Haley and Koon advanced to a runoff election on June 22.[52] In the runoff, she defeated Koon 55 percent to 45 percent.[53] After his loss, Koon accused Haley of running a smear campaign, which she denied.[54] She ran unopposed in the general election.[55]

Haley became the first Indian-American to hold office in South Carolina.[56] She was unopposed for re-election to a second term in 2006.[57] In 2008, she won re-election with 83 percent of the vote, defeating Democrat Edgar Gomez, who garnered only 17 percent.[58][59]

Legislative tenure and policies

[edit]

Haley was elected chair of the freshman caucus in 2005 and majority whip in the South Carolina General Assembly.[60] She was the only freshman legislator who had been named to be a whip at the time.[61]

One of Haley's stated goals was to lower taxes. She voted against a proposed cigarette surtax three times.[62] She voted for a bill that raised sales taxes from five cents per dollar to six cents per dollar, exempted sales tax on unprepared food such as canned goods, and exempted property tax on "owner-occupied residential property" except for the taxes due from what is still owed on the property.[63] Haley was named a "Taxpayer Hero" by Governor Mark Sanford in 2005 and a "Friend of the Taxpayer" by the South Carolina Association of Taxpayers in 2009.[64]

Haley implemented a plan in which teachers' salaries would be based on not only seniority and qualifications but also job performance, as determined by evaluations and reports from principals, students, and parents.[65] She supports school choice and charter schools.[66] Haley also supports barring legislators from collecting legislative pensions while in office. She believes such pensions should be based on only the $10,400 legislative salary instead of the salary plus lawmakers' $12,000 annual expense allowance.[67]

Haley has stated that, as a daughter of immigrants, she believes the immigration laws should be enforced.[68] She voted in favor of a law that requires employers to be able to prove that newly hired employees are legal residents of the United States, and also requires all immigrants to carry documentation at all times proving that they are legally in the United States.

Haley describes herself as pro-life and has supported legislation to restrict abortion.[69][70][71] She has stated "I'm not pro-life because the Republican Party tells me. I'm pro-life because all of us have had experiences of what it means to have one of these special little ones in our life."[71] In 2009, she co-sponsored a bill that would mandate a 24-hour waiting period for women seeking abortions after an ultrasound, also known as the "reflecting" period.[72] The bill passed both legislative chambers in 2010 and was signed into law by Governor Sanford later that year.[73]

In 2016, as governor, Haley re-signed a new state law that bans abortions at 20 weeks of pregnancy.[71] She has voted in favor of some abortion-related bills that were tabled or rejected, including the Inclusion of Unborn Child/Fetus in Definition for Civil Suits Amendment, Prohibiting Employment Termination Due to Abortion Waiting Period amendment, and Exempting Cases of Rape from Abortion Waiting Period amendment. The latter would have allowed women not to have to wait 24 hours before having an abortion in some cases.[74]

As a state legislator, Haley served on the Committee on Labor, Commerce and Industry[75] and the Committee on Medical, Military, Public and Municipal Affairs.[75] She had several caucus memberships, including the Freshman Caucus in 2005–06 (chair), the Sportsman's Caucus, and the Women's Caucus in 2007 (vice chair).[76] She also served on the Lexington County Meth Taskforce.

Governor of South Carolina (2011–2017)

[edit]

2010 gubernatorial election

[edit]
Haley's gubernatorial portraits during her first (left) and second (right) term

On May 14, 2009, Haley announced that she would run for the Republican nomination for governor of South Carolina in the 2010 election.[77] Haley had been persuaded to run by incumbent governor and fellow Republican Mark Sanford.[78] She was endorsed by former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney, as well as Jenny Sanford, the first lady of South Carolina.[79][80] Haley also received the endorsement of former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin three weeks before the primary. When she received Palin's endorsement, Haley was trailing three other candidates in the polls.[81]

The Republican gubernatorial primary took place on June 8, 2010, and Haley received 49% of the vote, forcing a runoff election on June 22.[82] Haley won the runoff vote 65 to 35 percent.[83] According to ABC News, "pundits credited the notable endorsements of tea party groups, former state first lady Jenny Sanford, and former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin with legitimizing her candidacy in the face of the state's male-dominated political establishment".[84]

Haley was elected governor on November 2, 2010, defeating Democratic candidate Vincent Sheheen, 51% to 47%.[85] Upon her election, Haley became the third non-white American to be elected governor of a Southern state (the first two such governors were Virginia's Douglas Wilder and Louisiana's Bobby Jindal).[86]

2014 reelection

[edit]
Haley speaking at the Conservative Political Action Conference in National Harbor, Maryland, March 2013

On August 12, 2013, Haley announced she would seek a second term as governor.[87] She faced a challenge in the Republican primary from Tom Ervin, who later withdrew and reentered the race as an independent.[88][89] As in 2010, Vincent Sheheen of the Democratic Party ran against Haley. Libertarian Steve French and United Citizens Party candidate Morgan Bruce Reeves also ran.[89] The five candidates debated twice.[90][91] A week after the second debate, Ervin withdrew from the race and endorsed Sheheen.[92]

Haley was reelected on November 4, 2014, defeating Sheheen, 55.9% to 41.3%.[93]

Tenure

[edit]

Haley took office as governor in January 2011. In 2012, former governor Mitt Romney considered her for his vice-presidential running mate.[69] Haley said that she would turn down any potential vice presidential offer.[94]

In June 2011, Haley signed an "Arizona-style" immigration law.[95] Much of the act was blocked by the federal courts, which found several key provisions to be unconstitutional.[96][97]

During her second term, Haley feuded with veteran lawmakers in the General Assembly. She endorsed powerful senate finance chairman Hugh Leatherman's primary opponent in 2016.[98] After winning the primary, Leatherman stated that Haley was not just a lame duck, but a "dead duck".[99] Her second term as governor was set to expire on January 9, 2019; however, Haley resigned her position on January 24, 2017, to serve as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations.[100]

Haley delivered the official Republican response to President Barack Obama's 2016 State of the Union Address on January 12, 2016.[101]

In 2016, Haley was named by Time magazine as one of the 100 most influential people in the world.[102][103]

Haley was mentioned in January 2016 as a potential candidate for vice presidency in the 2016 presidential election.[104][105][34] On May 4, 2016, after Trump became the presumptive presidential nominee, Haley said she had no interest in the vice presidential nomination.[106][107]

Four lieutenant governors served under Haley. Haley, a Republican, welcomed Yancey McGill, a Democrat, to serve as her lieutenant governor after Glenn F. McConnell's resignation. Haley was initially against having a Democrat serve as the second-in-command to the governor, but she, along with the Senate, eventually acquiesced.[108]

On December 17, 2012, Haley announced she would appoint Tim Scott to fill the vacancy created by the resignation of Senator Jim DeMint, who previously announced that he would retire from the Senate to become the president of the Heritage Foundation.[109] Following his appointment, Scott became the first African American U.S. senator from South Carolina.[110]

Haley chose Scott over others on her short list, including Representative Trey Gowdy, former South Carolina attorney general Henry McMaster, former First Lady of South Carolina Jenny Sanford, and South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control Director Catherine Templeton.[111]

In July 2013, Haley was fined $3,500 by the State Ethics Commission and given a "public warning" for failing to report the addresses of eight donors during her 2010 campaign for governor.[112]

In August 2013, Haley signed an extradition order for Dusten Brown to be brought to South Carolina in the Adoptive Couple v. Baby Girl case.[113][114]

Gubernatorial policies

[edit]

Upon becoming governor, Haley appointed Bobby Hitt as the state's secretary of commerce.[115] In her State of the State address and other speeches, she touted South Carolina's economic growth and low unemployment rate,[116] and urged businesses to move to the state based on a low cost of doing business, "a loyal, willing workforce," and South Carolina's status as "one of the lowest union-participation states in the country."[117][118]

Before June 2015, Haley supported flying the Confederate flag on the statehouse grounds.[119] In the immediate aftermath of the Charleston church shooting, Haley did not take a position on removing the flag, saying, "I think the state will start talking about that again, and we'll see where it goes."[120][121] On June 22, Haley called for the removal of the Confederate flag from the statehouse grounds.[122] She stated:

"These grounds [the State Capital] are a place that everybody should feel a part of. What I realized now more than ever is people were driving by and felt hurt and pain. No one should feel pain." Haley also said, "There is a place for that flag", but she added, "It's not in a place that represents all people in South Carolina."[123]

In July 2015, Haley signed a bill to authorize removing the Confederate flag from the flagpole on the grounds of the South Carolina Capitol.[124][125] In December 2019, she defended the people of South Carolina, saying that "some people" in South Carolina saw the flag as a representation of "service and sacrifice and heritage" before the flag was hijacked by the white supremacist mass killer Dylann Roof.[126][127] In regard to the state trial of Roof, Haley urged prosecutors to seek the death penalty against him.[128]

Haley and Indian prime minister Narendra Modi in New York on September 28, 2014

In April 2016, Haley indicated she would not support an anti-trans "bathroom bill" introduced by the South Carolina State Senate that would require transgender individuals to use restrooms based on their gender assigned at birth. Haley said that the legislation was unnecessary and would not solve any identifiable problem in the state.[129][130][131]

In 2021, Haley spoke against Executive Order 13988, officially titled Preventing and Combating Discrimination on the Basis of Gender Identity or Sexual Orientation.[132]

Haley with Israeli defense minister Avigdor Lieberman in 2017

Haley has been described by South Carolina senator Lindsey Graham as a "strong supporter of the State of Israel." As governor, she signed an anti-BDS law to stop efforts of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement. This legislation was the first of its kind on a statewide level.[133] Haley also stated that "nowhere has the UN's failure been more consistent and more outrageous than in its bias against our close ally Israel."[134]

Haley supports voter photo ID laws.[135]

Veto record

[edit]

During her 2011–2017 gubernatorial term, Haley vetoed 50 bills, 24 (48%) of which were overridden by the state legislature.

Haley's Veto Record[136][137][138]
Legislative Veto Action
Total % of Total
Sustained
17 34%
Overridden
24 48%
Partial/Certain Items Sustained
9 18%
Total Vetoes
50

United States ambassador to the United Nations (2017–2018)

[edit]
Haley meeting with Sen. Dan Sullivan shortly after her nomination to become US ambassador to the United Nations

Nomination and confirmation

[edit]

On November 23, 2016, then President-elect Donald Trump announced his intention to nominate Haley for ambassador to the United Nations.[139] Upon taking office on January 20, 2017, Trump sent Haley's nomination to the United States Senate.[140] She was confirmed two days later on a 96–4 vote; the four senators who voted against Haley were independent Bernie Sanders (Vermont) and Democrats Martin Heinrich (New Mexico), Tom Udall (New Mexico), and Chris Coons (Delaware).[141]

Trump reportedly considered Haley for the position of secretary of state, which she declined.[142] Haley was the first Indian American to hold a Cabinet-level position.[143] Immediately following her confirmation by the U.S. Senate, Haley resigned as South Carolina governor, and Lt. Governor Henry McMaster became governor.[144]

Haley sworn in by Vice President Mike Pence on January 25, 2017, Senator Marco Rubio standing to the side

Haley was sworn in by Vice President Mike Pence on January 25, 2017.[145] She met with United Nations secretary-general António Guterres on January 27, 2017, at the UN Headquarters in New York City.[146] She replaced Ambassador Samantha Power.[147]

Tenure

[edit]

Defining aspects of Haley's tenure as U.S. ambassador include her consistently strong advocacy for Israel,[148][149][150] her defense of the Trump administration's 2018 withdrawal of the U.S. from the Iran nuclear deal,[149] and her withdrawal of the U.S. from the United Nations Human Rights Council, a move reversed under the Biden administration, when the U.S. rejoined the council.[149]

She defended the Trump administration's decision to withdraw the U.S. from the Paris climate agreement, a move later reversed, as the Biden administration reentered the agreement.[149] As ambassador, Haley sometimes took positions at odds from the Trump White House; she announced that the U.S. would impose new sanctions on Russia and on the Bashar al-Assad regime in Syria, but new sanctions were blocked by the White House.[149]

Russia and Syria

[edit]

In 2017, Haley declared to the U.N. Security Council that sanctions against Russia for its Crimean conflict would not be lifted until Russia returned control over the region to Ukraine.[151] Later that year, Haley said the U.S. would retain "strong and tough" sanctions against Russia due to its actions in Ukraine.[152]

On March 30, 2017, Haley stated that the U.S. would no longer focus on forcing Syrian president Bashar al-Assad to leave power. This was a policy shift from former president Barack Obama's initial stance on Assad.[153] On April 5, speaking to the U.N. Security Council a day after the Khan Shaykhun chemical attack, Haley said Russia, Assad, and Iran "have no interest in peace" and attacks similar to this would continue occurring should nothing be done in response.[154] A day later, the U.S. launched 59 Tomahawk cruise missiles toward the Shayrat Air Base in Syria. Haley called the strike a "very measured step" and warned that the U.S. was prepared "to do more" despite wishing it would not be required.[155]

On April 12, after Russia blocked a draft resolution meant to condemn the Khan Shaykhun chemical attack, Haley criticized Russia, saying, "We need to see Russia choose to side with the civilized world over an Assad government that brutally terrorizes its own people."[156] On June 28, while appearing before the United States House Committee on Foreign Affairs, Haley credited Trump's warning to Syria with stopping another chemical attack: "I can tell you due to the president's actions, we did not see an incident."[157]

In April 2017, Haley spoke out against Ramzan Kadyrov amid the murders and persecution of gay men in Chechnya, which is part of the Russian Federation. She said: "We continue to be disturbed by reports of kidnapping, torture, and murder of people in Chechnya based on their sexual orientation...this violation of human rights cannot be ignored."[158]

Iran

[edit]

In April 2017, while holding her first session as president of the UN Security Council, Haley charged Iran and Hezbollah with having "conducted terrorist acts" for decades within the Middle East.[159]

In September 2017, Haley stated that "some countries", a reference to Russia, although Haley did not refer to Russia by name, were shielding Iran by blocking the International Atomic Energy Agency from verifying Iranian compliance with the international nuclear agreement with Iran. Haley said that it "appears that some countries are attempting to shield Iran from even more inspections. Without inspections, the Iran deal is an empty promise."[160]

Also in December 2017, Haley accused Iran of backing the Houthi rebels in the Yemeni Civil War, in which the Houthis were fighting the Saudi-backed Hadi government. She said that the "fight against Iranian aggression is the world's fight." Iranian officials denied the accusations, saying that they "seek also to cover up for the Saudi war crimes in Yemen, with the US complicity, and divert attention from the stalemate war of aggression against the Yemenis." Iran likened Haley's presentation to that of then-Secretary of State Colin Powell, before the 2003 invasion of Iraq.[161] Haley also said that "It's hard to find a conflict or terrorist group in the Middle East that doesn't have Iran's fingerprints all over it."

Comments on proposed Muslim ban

[edit]

On March 15, 2017, Haley said she would not support a ban on Muslim immigration to the U.S. should President Trump choose to enact one, but argued that Trump's proposal was not a Muslim ban. She insisted she would "never support a Muslim ban", saying "It would be un-American" and "I don't think we should ever ban anyone based on their religion". Haley affirmed this stance by claiming Trump said, "Let's temporarily pause, and you prove to me that the vetting is okay, that I can trust these people coming through for the American people."[162]

North Korea

[edit]

Haley said the U.S. military could be deployed in response to any further North Korean missile tests or usage of nuclear missiles and that she believed Kim Jong-un understood this due to pressure by both the U.S. and China.[163][164] On May 14, 2017, after North Korea performed a ballistic missile test, Haley said Kim was "in a state of paranoia" after feeling pressure from the U.S.[165] On June 2, 2017, after the U.N. Security Council approved a resolution adding fifteen North Koreans and four entities linked to North Korea's nuclear and missile programs to a sanctions blacklist, Haley said the council's vote was "sending a clear message to North Korea today: Stop firing ballistic missiles or face the consequences"[166]

On July 5, 2017, during a U.N. Security Council meeting, in response to North Korea launching an intercontinental ballistic missile, Haley announced the US would within days "bring before the Security Council a resolution that raises the international response in a way that is proportionate to North Korea's new escalation."[167] The following month the U.N. Security Council unanimously approved sanctions on North Korea banning exports worth over $1 billion. Haley said that the sanctions package was "the single largest ... ever leveled against the North Korean regime."[168]

Israel–Palestine

[edit]
Haley in the Golan Heights

In a May 2017 interview, Haley expressed interest in moving the U.S. embassy to Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.[169] She said the U.N. had "bullied Israel for a very long time" and pledged the US would end this treatment while in Jerusalem.[170] In response to a December 2017 General Assembly Resolution ES-10/19 (an Egyptian-sponsored resolution to void any unilateral decisions on Jerusalem's status and demand that countries "refrain from the establishment of diplomatic missions in the holy city"), Haley warned UN members that she would be "taking names" of countries that voted to reject Trump's decision to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and move the U.S. embassy there, writing, "As you consider your vote, I encourage you to know the president and the US take this vote personally. The president will be watching this vote carefully and has requested I report back on those who voted against us."[171]

The resolution passed with 128 in favor, 9 against, and 35 abstaining. Haley traveled to some countries that voted "No," such as Guatemala and Honduras, and thanked them for their support in the emergency special session.[172] The U.S. moved its embassy to Jerusalem in 2018. In her later memoirs, Haley said that a faction within the Trump administration, led by Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, strongly opposed the decision to move the embassy.[173]

In 2017, Haley blocked the appointment of Salam Fayyad, a Palestinian, as UN envoy to Libya, saying that "The United States does not currently recognize a Palestinian state or support the signal this appointment would send within the United Nations."[148] However, the same year—one day after Trump had suggested he might be open to a one-state solution to the Israel-Palestinian conflict—Haley reaffirmed that U.S. policy was to "absolutely support a two-state solution" to the conflict.[174]

In July 2017, after the UNESCO voted to designate the Hebron's Old City and the Cave of the Patriarchs as Palestinian territory as well as endangered World Heritage Sites, Haley called the choice "tragic on several levels" in a statement (see Israeli–Palestinian conflict in Hebron).[175]

In January 2018, she supported President Trump's withholding humanitarian aid to Palestinians through the U.N. Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA).[176]

Rohingya persecution in Myanmar

[edit]

In September 2017, Haley said that her government was "deeply troubled" by reports of atrocities against Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar.[177] Haley criticized Myanmar's civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi for justifying the imprisonment of the two Reuters journalists (Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo) who reported on the ethnic cleansing and other atrocities perpetrated by the government.[178]

Haley alongside President Donald Trump and United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres, October 2017

Hatch Act

[edit]

In October 2017, the federal Office of Special Counsel determined that Haley had violated the federal Hatch Act in June 2017 by retweeting Trump's endorsement of Ralph Norman, a Republican candidate for Congress in South Carolina. Haley deleted the retweet after a complaint was filed by the government watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington. The Office of Special Counsel issued a reprimand by letter but did not recommend any further action be taken against Haley. The special counsel's letter warned Haley that any future violation could be considered "a willful and knowing violation of the law."[179][180]

Capital punishment resolution

[edit]

In October 2017, the U.S., along with 13 other nations, voted against a U.N. Human Rights Council resolution that condemned the use of capital punishment when "applied arbitrarily or in a discriminatory manner" and specifically condemned "the imposition of the death penalty as a sanction for specific forms of conduct, such as apostasy, blasphemy, adultery and consensual same-sex relations." LGBTQ rights advocates in the U.S., including the Human Rights Campaign, were critical of the vote. After the vote, a State Department spokeswoman said that the U.S. voted against the resolution "because of broader concerns with the resolution's approach in condemning the death penalty in all circumstances" and said that the U.S. "unequivocally condemns the application of the death penalty for conduct such as homosexuality, blasphemy, adultery, and apostasy. We do not consider such conduct appropriate for criminalization."[181]

Comments on Trump sexual abuse allegations

[edit]

In December 2017, Haley said that the women who had accused President Trump of touching or groping them without their consent "should be heard, and should be dealt with... And I think any woman who has felt violated or felt mistreated in any way, they have every right to speak up." When questioned on whether the accusations were a "settled issue" as a result of the 2016 election, she stated that this was "for the people to decide. I know that he was elected. But, you know, women should always feel comfortable coming forward. And we should all be willing to listen to them."[182]

Withdrawal of U.S. from Human Rights Council

[edit]

On June 19, 2018, Haley and U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced that the U.S. was pulling out of the United Nations Human Rights Council, accusing the council of being "hypocritical and self-serving"; in the past, Haley had accused it of "chronic anti-Israel bias."[183] "When the Human Rights Council treats Israel worse than North Korea, Iran, and Syria, it is the Council itself that is foolish and unworthy of its name. It is time for the countries who know better to demand changes," Haley said at the time, pointing to the council's adoption of five resolutions condemning Israel.[184]

China

[edit]

In October 2018, Haley raised the issue of China's re-education camps and human rights abuses against the Uyghur Muslim minority. She said that "At least a million Uighurs and other Muslim minorities have been imprisoned in so-called 're-education camps' in western China," and detainees are "tortured...forced to renounce their religion and to pledge allegiance to the Communist Party."[185]

Resignation

[edit]

On October 9, 2018, Haley resigned as the U.N. ambassador, effective December 31, 2018.[186][187][188] Trump heaped praise on Haley, declaring she was "special to me" at the Oval Office meeting where her resignation was announced, emphasizing that she was not leaving on bad terms.[189] He even raised the possibility she might rejoin the administration later "in a different capacity".[190] Haley portrayed her departure as the act of a conscientious public servant, saying, "I think you have to be selfless enough to know when you step aside and allow someone else to do the job."[189] The news shocked allied diplomats and other senior White House officials.[189][190] Kelly Craft succeeded Haley in the post.[191]

Theories behind the resignation
[edit]

Haley's sudden resignation stunned the political world and multiple theories were floated as potential reasons.[192][190] A theory many political commentators cited was that her "voice of moderation" was not in line with those of newly appointed Trump cabinet officials such as John Bolton and Mike Pompeo. Haley wielded more influence than Rex Tillerson, then secretary of state, during the first year of the Trump administration, acting almost as a "shadow secretary of state".[193] On this theory, Haley left on her own terms after seeing her influence shrink after Pompeo was appointed secretary of state.[192]

Haley's resignation was announced one day after the anti-corruption watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) accused Haley of accepting seven luxury private plane trips as gifts from South Carolina business leaders.[194] CREW was the first to break this story after requesting an Inspector General investigation. Haley listed these seven flights as gifts on a 2018 financial disclosure, claiming they were not ethics violations because they were from personal contacts. A spokesperson for CREW said it has no reason to believe that this was related to her resignation as ambassador, and that this was similar to the activities of other Trump administration officials.[195] Another theory cites her then college-age children, family finances, and intention to take a break, which Haley conveyed to Trump six months before she resigned.[192]

Post-ambassadorship (2019–2022)

[edit]

In 2019, Haley created a new 501(c)(4) advocacy group, Stand for America.[196][197] Stand for America did not disclose its donors, but a document subsequently obtained by the press showed that it raised $71 million in 2019 from several billionaires and well-known Republican Party mega-donors, including Paul Singer, Stanley Druckenmiller, Sheldon and Miriam Adelson, and Scott Bessent.[197] Haley's team unsuccessfully demanded that Politico not report on the donor list it had obtained.[197]

In February 2019, Haley was nominated to the board of directors of Boeing, elected at the annual shareholder meeting in April 2019.[198][199] She had previously fought a unionization effort at Boeing South Carolina plant in North Charleston, where the 787 Dreamliner is produced.[199][200][201] She supported a 2009 economic development package, valued at up to $900 million, to incentivize Boeing to relocate the 787 Dreamliner production facility to North Charleston, and, as governor, approved an additional $120 million to Boeing for its expansion.[200] Boeing board members earn at least $315,000 a year as of 2017.[202]

In March 2020, Haley resigned from Boeing's board of directors, saying she disagreed with the company's decision to request federal bailout funds during the COVID-19 pandemic.[201][200] Following the 2024 grounding of the Boeing 737 Max-9, the Lever reported that Haley, while at Boeing, helped kill an initiative that would have forced the company to "more comprehensively disclose its spending to influence politicians and safety regulators."[203]

In March 2019, Nikki Haley critiqued Senator Bernie Sanders for comparing healthcare costs in Finland and the U.S., saying: "Health care costs are too high. That is true. But comparing us to Finland is ridiculous. Ask them how their health care is. You won't like their answer".[204]

Haley endorses Glenn Youngkin's gubernatorial campaign in 2021.

In August 2019, Trump denied rumors that he had sought to replace Vice President Mike Pence with Haley as his running mate in the 2020 U.S. presidential election.[205][206]

In November 2019, Haley criticized Trump's first impeachment. Comparing it to "the death penalty" for a public official, she added, "You're gonna impeach a president for asking for a favor that didn't happen and – and giving money and it wasn't withheld?"[207]

Haley supported Trump's January 2020 killing of Iranian general Qasem Soleimani.[208] In a Fox News appearance and a later tweet, she falsely claimed that Democrats were "mourning the loss of Soleimani."[209][210]

On January 8, 2021, Haley condemned Twitter's controversial decision to suspend Trump from its platform in the aftermath of the Capitol riots. On Twitter, she compared the suspension to Chinese censorship, writing: "Silencing people, not to mention the President of the US, is what happens in China not our country. #Unbelievable."[211]

In early 2021, Haley created a PAC to endorse and support candidates in the 2022 midterm elections.[212] She hired former NRSC political director Betsy Ankney to be the executive director.[213]

In October 2021, Haley was selected to replace David Wilkins for a lifetime position on the Clemson University Board of Trustees.[214]

Relations with Donald Trump

[edit]

During the 2016 Republican presidential primaries, Haley supported and campaigned for U.S. Senator Marco Rubio of Florida.[215] After Rubio dropped out of the election, she supported Ted Cruz.[216]

In June 2016, on the one-year anniversary of the Emanuel AME Church shooting, Haley warned that Trump's rhetoric could lead to violent tragedy.[217] She received extensive press coverage for saying "bless your heart" in response to an attack by Trump.[218][219][220][221] Trump had attacked her on Twitter after she called for him to release his tax records.[222] During the election, she said:

I will not stop until we fight a man that chooses not to disavow the KKK. That is not a part of our party. That's not who we want as president. We will not allow that in our country.[223]

In October 2016, while acknowledging she was "not a fan" of Trump, Haley said she would vote for him and endorsed him as "the best person based on the policies, and dealing with things like Obamacare."[224][225]

Donald Trump with Haley at the United Nations General Assembly, 2018

After being elected president of the United States in 2016, Donald Trump nominated Haley to the post of U.S. ambassador to the United Nations in January 2017.[140] Following Senate confirmation,[141] Haley was sworn in as U.N. ambassador on January 25, 2017.[145]

After resigning as UN ambassador in December 2018, Haley remained supportive of the Trump administration and called Trump a "friend." She said she was "proud of the successes of the administration" and "I'm not going to apologize" for working with Trump. After Trump's election loss to Joe Biden, she said, "I understand the president. I understand that genuinely, to his core, he believes he was wronged. This is not him making it up."[226]

Haley called Trump's actions around the 2021 storming of the United States Capitol "not his finest," but opposed Trump's second impeachment, criticizing Democrats and journalists on Fox News's The Ingraham Angle with Laura Ingraham. In that January 25 interview, she also said she would vote against impeachment: "They will bring about impeachment, yet they say they are for unity. They beat him up before he got into office. They are beating him up after he leaves office. At some point, give the man a break. I mean, move on."[227]

In an interview on January 12, 2021, published a month later, while Trump's second impeachment trial was underway on charges that he had incited the January 6 attack, Haley said, "We need to acknowledge he let us down. He went down a path he shouldn't have, and we shouldn't have followed him, and we shouldn't have listened to him. And we can't let that ever happen again."[228] According to Politico in February 2021, Haley reached out to Trump to request a meeting at Mar-a-Lago. Trump reportedly declined the request.[229]

In February 2021, when asked whether Trump was a friend, Haley replied, "Friend is a loose term."[226] She has been critical of Trump's role during the 2021 storming of the United States Capitol,[226] saying that she was angry that Trump took no action to protect Vice President Pence, adding, "When I tell you I'm angry, it's an understatement."[226]

In an op-ed published in the Wall Street Journal in February 2021, Haley wrote: "Most of Mr. Trump's major policies were outstanding and made America stronger, safer and more prosperous. Many of his actions since the election were wrong and will be judged harshly by history...I will gladly defend the bulk of the Trump record and his determination to shake up the corrupt status quo in Washington."[230]

Haley repeatedly said that she would support Trump in 2024 if he received the Republican nomination, even if he were to be convicted of criminal charges. She also asserted that Trump cannot win a general election.[231][232] In a September 2023 appearance on Face the Nation, she said that she would "always" support the Republican presidential nominee but added that Americans "are not going to vote for a convicted criminal."[233] In March 2024, however, Haley hinted that she might not endorse Trump and asserted that she may no longer be bound by her pledge to support the eventual Republican nominee.[234]

On May 22, 2024, Haley said she would vote for Trump.[235]

Presidential campaign (2023–2024)

[edit]
Nikki Haley speaking at an event in Ankeny, Iowa during the primary campaign

In July 2022, Haley hinted at a potential run for the 2024 United States presidential election during her speech at the Christians United for Israel summit in Washington, D.C. Her strong stance against any potential Iran nuclear deal resonated, as she asserted her readiness to "shred" such an agreement on her first day in office.[236]

On February 14, 2023, Haley formally announced her candidacy, becoming the second major candidate to enter the race for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, following Trump's earlier announcement.[237][238] Notably, she had previously stated she would not run if Trump also sought the nomination.[239] Trump encouraged Haley to enter the race against him, telling her to "follow her heart" and that "she should do what she wants to."[240]

Haley's candidacy marked a historic moment as she became the fifth woman and the first woman of color to contend for the Republican presidential nomination.[241][242] Despite being considered a serious contender for the nomination, Haley faced an uphill battle against Trump and Ron DeSantis.[243][244]

Haley garnered endorsements from New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu; U.S. Representative Ralph Norman; former U.S. Representative Will Hurd; and Cindy Warmbier, the mother of Otto Warmbier.[245][246][247][248] In November 2023, Haley solidified her position in the race by receiving the endorsement of Americans for Prosperity Action, an organization connected to the Koch network.[249]

In early January 2024, CNN reported that Haley had polled within single digits of Trump (at 32%, to Trump's 39%) in New Hampshire.[250]

On January 15, 2024, Haley finished in third place in the Iowa caucuses with 19% of the vote, behind Trump with 51% and DeSantis with 21%.[251] Notably, she prevailed over Trump by one vote in Johnson County, showcasing pockets of support within the state.[252]

On January 19, U.S. senator and former presidential candidate Tim Scott – who was appointed to the U.S. Senate by Haley in 2012 – endorsed Trump for president.[253][254][255][256] Days before she dropped out of the race, she received the endorsements of Republican senators Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska.[257]

On January 23, Haley was defeated by Trump in the New Hampshire primary,[258] 54.3%–43.3%.[259] After this defeat, Haley incorrectly predicted that the first party to ditch its eighty-year-old candidate will win the election.[260]

On February 24, 2024, Haley lost the primary in her home state of South Carolina 59.8% – 39.5%.[261]

Haley won her first primary on March 2, 2024, taking the District of Columbia Republican primary with 62% of the vote. Two days later, on Super Tuesday, she won only one primary (the Vermont Republican Party primary) compared to the 14 primaries won by Trump. On March 6, 2024, Haley announced the suspension of her campaign.[262][263][264] On March 12, Trump officially became the party's presumptive presidential nominee.[citation needed]

Haley is the first woman to have won a state or territorial Republican presidential primary contest,[265] following Shirley Chisholm as the second woman of color to secure a major party nominating contest.[266]

Positions and policies during presidential campaign

[edit]

Social issues

[edit]

In February 2023, Haley supported a proposal by Senator Lindsey Graham to establish a national 15-week abortion ban, with exceptions for rape, incest, health, and life of the mother, arguing that this proposal had a chance at gaining a "national consensus."[267][268][269] In May 2023, she pledged to sign a federal abortion ban, without specifying how many weeks such a ban should cover.[268] In an August 2023 primary debate, Haley refused to directly say whether she supported a federal abortion ban.[270] She supports promoting access to contraception.[269][270] Following an Alabama Supreme Court decision ruling that embryos are children under state law and, therefore, that fertility clinics are liable for embryos as if they were children, Haley said she agreed with the court's reasoning and that "embryos, to me, are babies."[271][272] After backlash against the ruling, Haley distanced herself from her previous comments, saying that she agrees that an embryo is an "unborn baby" but does not agree with the effect of the Alabama ruling on fertility clinics.[273]

In February 2023, Haley said that the Florida Parental Rights in Education Act, which bars public schools from having classroom discussion about sexual orientation or gender identity for students from kindergarten through third grade, did not go far enough. She suggested that such a prohibition be extended through seventh grade, and that any discussions about sex and sexuality require parental consent.[274][275] (In April 2023, Florida extended the ban through 12th grade.)[276]

Haley has said she supports "freedom" regarding same-sex marriage,[277] but opposes the participation of trans women in women's sports.

Haley was the third candidate, after Trump and Vivek Ramaswamy,[269] to sign a placard circulated by the Concerned Women for America that stated "only women can be pregnant and bear children". The placard also called for federal agencies to "uphold" the concept of binary sex "in every policy and program", but stopped short of calling pregnancy a precondition for womanhood.[278]

Haley met with Caitlyn Jenner at the UN in 2017 while US ambassador to discuss "global LGBT issues".[279] In 2021, when a comment on social media mocked the meeting, Haley responded, "Caitlin came to see me at the UN and I appreciated her conservative views". Haley also rebuked actor Dean Cain, who had laughed at the post, tweeting "I don't find it funny."[280]

Haley has supported a TikTok ban, citing the app's ties to the Chinese government.[281] Her un-cited claim that "For every 30 minutes that someone watches TikTok every day, they become 17% more antisemitic, more pro-Hamas based on doing that" drew scrutiny.[281] Vivek Ramaswamy said during the debates that Haley had "made fun of me for actually joining TikTok while her own daughter was actually using the app for a long time."[282]

Fiscal issues

[edit]

On fiscal policy, Haley has indicated that she would be willing to make significant budget cuts, including to Medicare and Social Security.[269] She has called for raising the retirement age for future Social Security and Medicare beneficiaries (without identifying a specific age) and supports means-testing the programs.[283][284] She criticized both the pandemic relief act enacted by Democrats in 2021 and the initial pandemic relief act enacted by Republicans and signed by Trump in March 2020.[269]

Trump and DeSantis

[edit]

Referencing Trump's tenure, Haley said, "We cannot have four years of chaos, vendettas and drama." She added, "America needs a captain who will steady the ship, not capsize it," emphasizing that she would support America's allies rather than praising "dictators" such as Vladimir Putin and Kim Jong Un.[285]

As a candidate, Haley has taken an ambivalent stance toward Trump, implicitly critiquing him (for example, by calling for a "new generation" of leadership) but generally avoiding direct criticism of him.[286][287] In speeches and interviews, she attempted to appeal to both Reaganite Republicans, who dominated the party in the past, and Trumpist Republicans, who have dominated the party in the 2020s.[287] Haley has said she "would be inclined" to grant a pardon to Trump, who has been indicted on various criminal charges, saying it would be "good for the country."[269]

She denounced the criminal charges against Trump in New York, asserting that the prosecution was "political", but took a less firm stance on the indictment of Trump for keeping classified documents, saying that if the "indictment is true...then President Trump was incredibly reckless with our national security" but also criticizing the prosecution as "overreach" and a "vendetta".[269] During a debate in August 2023, she said she would support Trump as the Republican nominee even if he was convicted of crimes.[269]

Trump has called Haley "birdbrain,"[288] criticizing her at a 2023 election rally for breaking the promise she made him that she would not oppose him for the party's presidential nomination if he ran again.[288] DeSantis's campaign criticized her after Reid Hoffman, co-founder of LinkedIn and a major Democratic donor, gave $250,000 to Stand for America, Haley's Super PAC. DeSantis said she was an establishment candidate and a liberal darling.[289]

Environment and energy

[edit]

Haley has acknowledged that climate change is caused by human activity, but has rejected policies to decrease greenhouse gas emissions.[269] She has pledged, if elected, to again withdraw the U.S. from the Paris Agreement, revoke regulations restricting fossil fuel production and curtailing pollution from power plants and vehicles, and eliminate renewable energy subsidies.[269] She criticized the Biden administration's decision to allocate funds appropriated by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Deal to create a national electric vehicle charging network.[269]

Foreign policy

[edit]

In a February 2023 op-ed published by the New York Post, Haley vowed to "cut every cent in foreign aid for countries" that she deemed "enemies" of the United States.[290] In June 2023, she attacked Trump and DeSantis for their positions on the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[291] She said that Biden had not done enough on Ukraine, but did not detail what she would do differently as president.[269]

In December 2023, Haley rejected calls for a ceasefire in the Gaza war, saying that the "best way to save people in Gaza is to eliminate Hamas."[292] She called for a tougher approach to Iran, saying, "You've got to punch them hard."[293] She said that Palestinian refugees from Gaza should be accepted by countries sympathetic to Hamas such as Qatar, Iran and Turkey.[294]

Haley has faced criticism for her hawkish foreign policy positions as well as her positions on censoring and controlling social media and calling for the end of anonymous social media accounts.[295][296]

Term limits

[edit]

In February 2023, Haley announced that she supports congressional term limits and "mandatory mental competence tests for politicians over 75 years old," which received mixed feedback from U.S. senators.[297]

Labor

[edit]

Haley opposes labor unions and has called herself a "union buster".[298] As governor, she sought to stop workers at South Carolina's Boeing plant from unionizing, pledging to "make the unions understand full well that they are not needed, not wanted and not welcome in the state of South Carolina."[299][300]

American Civil War and slavery

[edit]

At a town hall in Berlin, New Hampshire, on December 27, 2023, Haley responded to a question about the origins of the American Civil War: "I think the cause of the Civil War was basically how government was going to run. The freedoms and what people could and couldn't do." After receiving criticism for her failure to mention slavery, Haley restated her position the next day, saying, "Of course the Civil War was about slavery."[301] On January 16, 2024, Haley stated, "The US has never been a racist country."[302][303]

Post-presidential campaign politics

[edit]

On April 15, 2024, it was announced that Haley would join the Hudson Institute, a conservative think-tank.[304] In a statement released on the same day, she described the group's work as "critical" and said she "looked forward to partnering with them to defend the principles that make America the greatest country in the world". She will serve as the next Walter P. Stern Chair.[305]

Despite suspending her campaign, Haley still received votes in Republican primaries beyond February, sometimes up to 20%.[306] On May 11, Trump confirmed that Haley was not under consideration to be his running mate in the 2024 election.[307] Ten days later, she stated she would vote for Trump in the general election.[308] The New Republic described her announcement as an endorsement.[309]

In May 2024, Haley visited Israel during the Gaza war and wrote "Finish Them!" and signed her name on artillery shells. Haley faced controversy due to Israel being accused of genocide.[310][311]

Haley spoke at the Republican National Convention in July, offering her ‘strong endorsement’ of Trump.[312]

In August 2024 Haley visited Taiwan and advocated for its full membership in the United Nations and World Health Organization.[313][314] She compared the American loss of authority in Afghanistan and the ongoing violence in the Middle East to the way that Taiwan is treated by the People's Republic of China, also drawing comparisons to Russian aggression in Ukraine.[315]

Haley joined the global communications firm Edelman as vice chair of its international public affairs team in September 2024.[316]

In the 2024 election, she received 458 write-in votes in the state of Vermont.[317]

On November 9 (four days after Trump won the election), Trump announced that Haley would not be appointed to a position in his second administration.[318]

Personal life

[edit]

Haley married Michael Haley on September 7, 1996.[319] They celebrated with both Sikh and Methodist ceremonies.[43] The couple have two children.[320][321]

Haley converted to Christianity in 1996, when she was baptized before her wedding at St. Andrew's by the Sea United Methodist Church, and converted due to the language barrier as she did not understand Sikh prayers.[322] However, she still identifies with aspects of the Sikh faith due to the common doctrines between Sikhism and Christianity, and remains active in the Sikh and Indian community.[323] Haley and her husband raised their children in the United Methodist Church, but frequently took their children to Sikh worship services along with Haley's parents.[324] She and her husband are members of Mt. Horeb Church in Lexington, South Carolina, and are also members of Sikh Religious Society of South Carolina, along with Haley's parents that reside with Haley.[325][326] She visited and prayed at the Harmandir Sahib with her husband in 2014 during her visit to India.[327] During a Christianity Today interview, when asked whether or not she hopes her parents convert to Christianity, Haley responded, "What I hope is that my parents do what's right for them.", and expressed gratitude for her Sikh upbringing.[328]

Her husband, an officer in the South Carolina Army National Guard, had a tour of duty in Afghanistan in 2013.[329][330]

Haley and her family reside on Kiawah Island, South Carolina, near the city of Charleston.[331][332]

Haley had an estimated net worth of $1 million in 2019. Her net worth grew to an estimated $8 million by 2022, propelled in part by book sales and joining the corporate boards of Boeing and United Homes Group.[333]

Books

[edit]
  • Can't Is Not an Option: My American Story, Sentinel, New York (2012). ISBN 978-1595230850
  • With All Due Respect: Defending America with Grit and Grace, St. Martin's Press, New York (2019). ISBN 978-1250266552
  • Foreword of A Better Blueprint for International Organizations: Advancing American Interests on the Global Stage, Foundation for Defense of Democracies, (2021).[334]
  • If You Want Something Done: Leadership Lessons from Bold Women, St. Martin's Press, New York (2022). ISBN 978-1250284976

Awards and honors

[edit]

Electoral history

[edit]
South Carolina House of Representatives 87th District Republican Primary Election, 2004[52]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Larry Koon (incumbent) 2,354 42.3%
Republican Nikki Haley 2,247 40.4%
Republican David Perry 968 17.4%
Total votes 5,569 100
SC House of Representatives 87th District Republican Primary Election Runoff, 2004
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Nikki Haley 2,929 54.7%
Republican Larry Koon (incumbent) 2,426 45.3%
Total votes 5,355 100
SC House of Representatives 87th District Election, 2004
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Nikki Haley 14,421 98.9%
None Write-ins 155 1.1%
Total votes 14,576 100
Republican hold
SC House of Representatives 87th District Election, 2006
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Nikki Haley (incumbent) 11,387 99.5%
None Write-ins 60 0.5%
Total votes 11,447 100
Republican hold
SC House of Representatives 87th District Election, 2008
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Nikki Haley (incumbent) 17,043 83.1%
Democratic Edgar Gomez 3,446 16.8%
None Write-ins 16 0.1%
Total votes 20,505 100
Republican hold
South Carolina Governor Republican Primary Election, 2010[353]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Nikki Haley 206,326 48.9%
Republican Gresham Barrett 91,824 21.8%
Republican Henry McMaster 71,494 16.9%
Republican Andre Bauer 52,607 12.5%
Total votes 422,251 100
South Carolina Governor Republican Primary Election Runoff, 2010[353]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Nikki Haley 233,733 65.1%
Republican Gresham Barrett 125,601 35.0%
Total votes 655,984 100
South Carolina Governor Election, 2010
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Nikki Haley 690,525 51.4%
Democratic Vincent Sheheen 630,534 46.9%
Green Morgan Bruce Reeves 20,114 1.5%
None Write-ins 3,025 0.2%
Total votes 1,344,188 100
Republican hold
South Carolina Governor Election, 2014
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Nikki Haley (incumbent) 696,645 55.9%
Democratic Vincent Sheheen 516,166 41.4%
Libertarian Steve French 15,438 1.2%
Independent Tom Ervine 11,496 0.9%
United Citizens Morgan Bruce Reeves 5,622 0.5%
None Write-ins 934 0.1%
Total votes 1,243,601 100
Republican hold

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Nimrata Nikki Randhawa Haley (born January 20, 1972) is an American politician and diplomat who served as the 116th governor of South Carolina from 2011 to 2017 and as United States ambassador to the United Nations from 2017 to 2018. Born in Bamberg, South Carolina, to Sikh immigrant parents from Punjab, India, she managed her family's clothing business before entering politics, serving in the South Carolina House of Representatives from 2005 to 2011 with a focus on transparency and tax cuts. As governor, Haley implemented economic reforms to reduce unemployment and regulations, and responded to the 2015 Charleston church shooting by leading the removal of the Confederate battle flag from the State House grounds; at the UN, she pursued a firm policy toward Iran, North Korea, and Syria, advocating sanctions and U.S. withdrawal from the UN Human Rights Council. In 2023, Haley launched a campaign for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, challenging Donald Trump on grounds of experience and governance while aligning with party stances on taxes, immigration, and abortion, but suspended her bid after limited primary success in March 2024. Since then, she has critiqued isolationism through writings and speeches, emphasizing U.S. alliances against threats from China and Russia.

Early life and education

Family and upbringing

Nimarata Nikki Randhawa was born on January 20, 1972, in Bamberg, South Carolina, to Ajit Singh Randhawa, a biology professor turned business owner, and Raj Kaur Randhawa, both Sikh immigrants from Amritsar in Punjab, India, who arrived in the United States in the late 1960s seeking educational and economic opportunities. The family settled in rural Bamberg, a town of under 3,000 people, where her parents founded a modest business amid financial strains and prejudice against their Indian and Sikh heritage. These challenges fostered Haley's self-reliance and work ethic; she assisted in the enterprise from childhood during periods of hardship that sometimes required community support. In the predominantly white, Christian Southern community, Haley faced bullying and ethnic taunts from peers, experiences she credits with building her personal resilience. Raised in her parents' Sikh tradition, Haley converted to Christianity in her early twenties, before her 1996 marriage, framing the decision as aligning with her evolving convictions amid community identity tensions.

Education

Nikki Haley attended Clemson University in Clemson, South Carolina, where she studied accounting and graduated in 1994 with a Bachelor of Science degree. She entered on a scholarship initially focused on textile management but switched to accounting. Haley began managing bookkeeping for her family's clothing store in Orangeburg County at age 12 and continued contributing during college. Haley earned no advanced degrees.

Pre-political career

Business ventures in South Carolina

After graduating from Clemson University in 1994, Haley worked briefly—less than two years—as an account supervisor at FCR Corporation, a Charlotte-based waste management and recycling firm, handling financial oversight for resource recovery operations. She then joined her family's business, Exotica International, Inc., a Bamberg boutique founded by her mother in 1976 that sold upscale women's clothing and accessories. As chief financial officer, Haley managed bookkeeping, taxes, and expansion, growing it into a multimillion-dollar enterprise by the early 2000s, including adding a menswear division in 1993. The company focused on self-reliant growth through customer service and inventory management, without debt or subsidies, until closing in 2008 after 32 years.

South Carolina House of Representatives

Elections and campaigns

In 2004, Nikki Haley challenged Republican incumbent Larry Koon, who had represented South Carolina House District 87 for over 30 years, in the GOP primary. She placed second in the June 8 primary, then won the June 22 runoff with 55 percent of the vote. Running as a political outsider with grassroots support, she emphasized tax cuts, ethics reform, and criticism of legislative self-dealing amid South Carolina's corruption history, such as Operation Lost Trust. With no Democratic opponent, Haley won the unopposed November 2 general election, becoming the first Indian-American elected to the state legislature. Her campaign mobilized conservative voters in the Republican-leaning district through personal outreach, including door-to-door canvassing and community events, overcoming Koon's tenure and fundraising advantage. Haley sought reelection in 2006 unopposed in both the Republican primary and general election, reflecting broadened appeal after her freshman term amid ongoing ethics scrutiny and reform calls in the General Assembly. As the first Republican woman to represent Lexington County in the House, her consecutive victories established her as a rising conservative voice on fiscal restraint and accountability.

Legislative record and key votes

Haley served in the South Carolina House of Representatives from 2005 to 2010, positioning herself as a fiscal conservative who opposed tax increases and challenged Republican support for higher spending. She voted to sustain Governor Mark Sanford's veto of a 2008 cigarette tax increase (H. 3567), which failed to override 54-57, and supported blocking overrides on related tax legislation in 2010 to promote limited government and property tax relief. She also rejected pork-barrel projects, criticizing legislative favoritism that crossed party lines. Amid state scandals, including those involving Sanford, Haley pushed for ethics reforms to improve transparency. She voted to censure Sanford in 2010 (H. 4219, passed 102-11). Haley backed measures like photo ID requirements for voting (H. 3418, passed 67-44 in 2009) and secret-ballot union elections (H. 3305, passed 106-12 in 2010), positions that often conflicted with party leaders despite her Republican affiliation.

Governorship of South Carolina

2010 election

Nikki Haley, a state representative with a business background, entered the 2010 Republican primary for South Carolina governor as an outsider candidate aligned with Tea Party principles, emphasizing fiscal conservatism and limited government amid the ongoing recession. She faced multiple challengers, including U.S. Representative Gresham Barrett, in the June 8, 2010, primary, where no candidate secured a majority, leading to a runoff against Barrett. Haley's campaign gained momentum from endorsements by prominent conservatives, notably Sarah Palin, who backed her on May 13, 2010, and rallied with her in Columbia, helping to counter attacks on her experience and personal life while reinforcing her anti-establishment appeal. In the June 22, 2010, runoff, Haley defeated Barrett decisively, capturing approximately 65% of the vote and securing the Republican nomination, which marked a shift away from traditional party insiders toward a more populist, reform-oriented figure. Her platform centered on job creation through business-friendly policies, education reforms including changes to funding formulas for greater equity, and reducing bureaucratic inefficiencies to aid economic recovery. Haley faced Democrat Vincent Sheheen and independent Morgan Reeves in the November 2, 2010, general election, winning with 690,525 votes (51.0%) to Sheheen's 47.0% and Reeves's 2.1%. This victory made her the first female governor of South Carolina and the second Indian-American governor in U.S. history, following Louisiana's Bobby Jindal, reflecting voter preference for her outsider narrative over Sheheen's legislative experience.

First term policies and achievements

During her first term as Governor of South Carolina from 2011 to 2015, Nikki Haley prioritized economic development and business-friendly policies to foster job growth and regulatory relief. She oversaw significant expansions in manufacturing, notably supporting Boeing's investment in the state. In April 2013, Haley signed legislation providing $120 million in incentives that facilitated Boeing's $1 billion expansion in North Charleston, which created 2,000 new jobs and contributed to the state's record $5.4 billion in capital investment recruitment for 2013. These efforts built on South Carolina's right-to-work status, which Haley defended against union challenges, including a successful federal court battle in August 2011 upholding the state's labor policies in relation to Boeing's operations. Haley implemented regulatory reforms to reduce barriers to business activity. In February 2013, she issued an executive order directing state agencies to review and eliminate regulations deemed impediments to economic growth, emphasizing a pro-jobs agenda during cabinet sessions. This initiative aimed to streamline operations and attract further investment, aligning with her broader push for fiscal conservatism, including tax reforms outlined in her 2013 State of the State address that cut income taxes for most payers without increasing overall burdens. On immigration enforcement, Haley signed Senate Bill 20 into law on June 27, 2011, allocating $1.3 million for state-level measures requiring law enforcement to verify immigration status during certain stops and prioritizing legal residency. This legislation, modeled on Arizona's SB 1070, sought to enhance border security and deter illegal immigration through state cooperation with federal authorities. In education, Haley advanced accountability and choice by supporting expansions in charter schools and literacy programs. Her administration backed a 2014 revision strengthening charter school quality and access, countering resistance from entrenched interests, while her $160 million K-12 reform plan included funding for reading coaches, summer camps, and technology to address achievement gaps, with subsidies for alternative public school options.

2014 reelection

Incumbent Republican Governor Nikki Haley won reelection on November 4, 2014, defeating Democratic state Senator Vincent Sheheen in a rematch of their 2010 contest. Haley received 696,645 votes (55.90%), while Sheheen garnered 516,166 (41.42%), with minor candidates taking the rest. Her 14.5 percentage point margin drew strong support from business interests and conservatives, who attributed economic progress to her administration during national recovery. Haley's campaign emphasized job growth, including over 25,000 manufacturing positions added in her first term—ranking among the top nationally—and investments from Boeing and Volvo. She highlighted line-item vetoes to limit spending, framing herself as a fiscal conservative in response to Sheheen's concerns over transparency and worker protections, while business leaders endorsed her deregulation and relocation incentives. The win made Haley the first South Carolina governor since Mark Sanford in 2006 to secure consecutive terms, underscoring her outsider appeal and Republican consolidation amid intraparty disputes on ethics reform. It confirmed her tactic of using economic data to engage voters wary of establishment politics.

Second term initiatives

Haley's second term began in January 2015. She prioritized recovery from the October 2015 floods caused by Hurricane Joaquin, which delivered over 20 inches of rain in parts of South Carolina and damaged thousands of homes and infrastructure. On October 1, she declared a state of emergency and mobilized the South Carolina National Guard, which saved over 200 lives during widespread flooding. By October 5, efforts shifted to long-term rebuilding, including the establishment of the One SC Fund on October 15 through the Central Carolina Community Foundation, which raised over $5 million in private donations to supplement federal aid for housing and community restoration. To expedite recovery, Haley issued Executive Order 2015-26 appointing Kevin Shwedo as State Disaster Recovery Coordinator to oversee approximately $500 million in federal Community Development Block Grant Disaster Recovery funds for housing rehabilitation benefiting over 2,000 households. Her administration secured waivers from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development to ease administrative requirements, allowing quicker resource distribution. Full housing recovery was achieved by 2021. This emphasis on infrastructure resilience extended to Hurricane Matthew in October 2016, when Haley declared a statewide emergency via Executive Order 2016-26, enabling preemptive evacuations and resource deployment that limited coastal damage. Separately, in criminal justice, she appointed a new Director of the South Carolina Department of Corrections in late 2014 to prioritize inmate reentry programs, prison staff safety, and recidivism reduction through rehabilitation rather than prison expansion.

Controversies and vetoes

Following the June 17, 2015, mass shooting at Charleston's Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, where Dylann Roof killed nine Black parishioners, Haley urged removal of the Confederate battle flag from the South Carolina State House grounds on June 22, calling it a symbol of division. She signed the legislation on July 9, 2015, after it passed with bipartisan majorities, including support from 94 House Republicans and 36 Senate Republicans. The decision drew praise from progressive outlets for promoting racial reconciliation but criticism from paleoconservatives and Confederate heritage groups, who viewed it as erasure of Southern history. Groups like the Sons of Confederate Veterans filed unsuccessful legal challenges. Opponents warned of intensified boycotts harming tourism, but Haley cited data showing no worsening of the NAACP boycott—ongoing since 2000 and estimated to cost cities $10 million annually—and record tourism revenues of $20.8 billion in 2016 visitor spending. Haley issued over 200 line-item vetoes during her tenure to curb spending, targeting pork-barrel projects, duplicative programs, and regulatory mandates. In fiscal year 2012-2013, she vetoed 81 items, including funds for museums, arts, and healthcare expansions. By 2015, she vetoed 87 provisions worth $30 million, though the legislature overrode about half.

U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations

Nomination and confirmation

On November 23, 2016, President-elect Donald Trump announced his intention to nominate South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley as the United States Ambassador to the United Nations, one of his first cabinet-level appointments. This marked Haley as the first former state governor nominated for the role without prior diplomatic experience, aligning with Trump's preference for political outsiders in foreign policy positions. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee held Haley's confirmation hearing on January 18, 2017, during which she outlined her multilateral diplomacy approach while prioritizing U.S. interests. On January 24, the Senate confirmed her by a 96-4 vote, with opposition from four Democratic senators, citing her executive experience in managing South Carolina's budget and crises like the 2015 Charleston church shooting. Vice President Mike Pence swore in Haley as UN ambassador on January 25, 2017, elevating the position to cabinet rank. The swift confirmation process highlighted her readiness for the role.

Key foreign policy actions

As U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations from January 2017 to December 2018, Nikki Haley confronted adversarial regimes by enforcing international norms through sanctions and vetoes, bypassing consensus processes that often shielded violators. She applied U.S. leverage to actors like Iran, Syria, and North Korea, criticizing UN inefficiencies that enabled evasion of responsibility. Haley defended Israel against UN actions she viewed as unbalanced, vetoing Security Council resolutions that targeted the country while ignoring threats from Hamas and Hezbollah. On December 18, 2017, she cast the sole U.S. veto against a resolution demanding reversal of U.S. recognition of Jerusalem as Israel's capital, arguing it insulted American sovereignty and rewarded anti-Israel bias. On June 1, 2018, the U.S. vetoed a draft condemning Israeli force along the Gaza border, which Haley called "morally bankrupt" for ignoring Palestinian instigation through incendiary kites and assaults. These steps supported the U.S. embassy move to Jerusalem in May 2018, which she presented as countering decades of UN pressure denying Israel's historical claims. In June 2018, Haley announced U.S. withdrawal from the UN Human Rights Council due to its bias against Israel—over 70 resolutions targeting Israel since 2006 versus fewer than 50 for the rest of the world—and acceptance of rights-abusing members like China, Venezuela, and Saudi Arabia. She termed it a "hypocritical and self-serving organization" that protected perpetrators despite U.S. reform attempts, such as stricter membership standards. Haley targeted Iran's nuclear violations and human rights abuses, pushing UN sanctions for missile tests and proxy activities in Yemen and Syria violating Resolution 2231. She cautioned that unchecked Iranian actions could mirror North Korea's nuclear path, calling for maximum pressure to limit Tehran's regional instability. On Syria, Haley condemned Bashar al-Assad's chemical weapons use, blaming Russia and Iran for blocking accountability via vetoes. After the April 4, 2017, sarin attack in Khan Shaykhun killing over 80 civilians, she told the Security Council on April 5 that the U.S. would act without UN approval if evidence confirmed responsibility. Following the April 7, 2018, chlorine attack in Douma, she confirmed chemical use, faulted Assad's backers, and backed U.S.-led strikes on April 14 to impair his arsenal. For North Korea, Haley advanced UN sanctions to curb its nuclear program, helping pass Resolution 2371 in August 2017 banning coal exports and capping oil imports—measures she said pressured Pyongyang by slashing revenue up to 30% and fostering talks. She pressed China on evasion and stressed bilateral enforcement when multilateral efforts failed.

Resignation and legacy

Haley announced her resignation as U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations on October 9, 2018, effective December 31, 2018, after two years in the role. She cited the need for government officials to step aside for others, denying any personal or policy disputes as factors. The announcement occurred amid reported tensions, including over Syria troop deployments, but Haley described her departure as long-planned and praised President Trump's leadership. Her legacy includes efforts to reduce U.S. financial contributions to the UN and enforce sanctions. She helped negotiate a $285 million cut to the UN's 2018 regular budget, addressing inefficiencies in operations funded largely by the U.S., which covered about 22% of costs. Haley advocated for stronger sanctions, contributing to UN Security Council Resolution 2397 in December 2017, which limited North Korea's refined petroleum imports to 500,000 barrels annually and required repatriation of overseas laborers to disrupt nuclear funding. She also backed an arms embargo on South Sudan during its civil war. Critics from progressive perspectives, including Human Rights Watch, argued her approach emphasized geopolitical rivals over human rights and defended allies too readily. Some conservatives criticized her continued UN engagement as insufficiently skeptical of international institutions, despite her support for U.S. withdrawal from the Human Rights Council over its focus on Israel in more than 70 resolutions since 2006.

Post-ambassador activities (2019–2022)

Private sector engagements

After resigning as U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations on December 31, 2018, Nikki Haley joined private sector roles leveraging her diplomatic and executive experience. In May 2019, she was elected to the board of directors of [[Boeing]], which has major operations in South Carolina. Boeing valued her background for global strategy and trade issues. She served until 2020, earning over $300,000 in compensation. Haley also took speaking engagements, charging $200,000 per domestic appearance plus private jet travel, addressing leadership, foreign policy, and economic topics for corporate audiences. Disclosures show earnings of $1 million to $12 million from speeches between 2019 and 2022, without lobbying ties. In November 2019, she published the memoir [[With All Due Respect (book)|''With All Due Respect: Defending America with Grit and Grace'']], focusing on her UN role and government inefficiencies. She avoided registered lobbying, emphasizing advisory roles.

Public speaking and commentary

Following her December 2018 resignation as U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley became a prominent conservative voice through speeches, media appearances, op-eds, and her 2019 book With All Due Respect. She emphasized principled leadership, national security threats, and Republican renewal amid domestic divisions, critiquing bureaucratic inertia and advocating decisive foreign policy based on her experience. At events like the 2020 Republican National Convention, she contrasted Republican approaches with Democratic policies, stating that Joe Biden had a record of weakness on international issues. Haley often addressed China's rising threat, urging economic realism over isolationism or unchecked engagement. In a 2019 speech, she warned of China's expanding influence, including in Hong Kong, and called for allied coordination and supply chain diversification to reduce vulnerabilities while engaging globally. By October 2020, she identified China as the top national security threat across party lines, stressing proactive steps like technology protections rather than optimism about Beijing's intentions. After the January 6, 2021, Capitol riot, Haley condemned the violence as unacceptable, rejected election denialism, and urged acceptance of the results to promote unity and refocus on conservative principles. She described the events as tragic, mourning losses on all sides, and viewed extremism and unfounded claims as distractions from real threats like foreign adversaries. Haley criticized the Biden administration's August 2021 Afghanistan withdrawal as an "embarrassing failure," citing the surrender of Bagram Air Base and abandonment of $85 billion in U.S. equipment to the Taliban. In appearances on Face the Nation and at the Reagan Presidential Library, she argued these actions projected weakness to adversaries and endangered allies without benefit, contrasting them with credible commitments.

Relationship with Donald Trump

Early support and first administration

After Donald Trump secured the Republican presidential nomination in 2016, Nikki Haley shifted her support from Senators Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz to Trump. On October 27, 2016, she stated her intention to vote for him, despite earlier criticisms and describing herself as "not a fan." This came amid Trump's campaign against establishment elites. Following Trump's election on November 8, 2016, he nominated Haley as United States Ambassador to the United Nations on November 23. The Senate confirmed her 96-4 on January 24, 2017, after a hearing on January 18. She was sworn in the next day. In the role, Haley advocated reducing U.S. contributions to international organizations and confronting adversaries. Her approach on Russia differed from Trump's initial stance toward Moscow. Haley negotiated a $285 million cut in the UN's 2018 budget. She defended the administration on Russia investigations while supporting the Mueller probe. In October 2017, she called Russian election interference an "act of war." During her February 2, 2017, Security Council debut, she criticized Russian actions in Ukraine.

Post-presidency frictions

Following the January 6, 2021, Capitol attack, Haley stated that Trump was "badly wrong" with his words in stoking the crowd. In a February interview, she said, "We need to acknowledge he let us down," adding that he had gone down a path he should not have and that the party should not have followed him. Haley affirmed Joe Biden's election victory as legitimate, rejecting claims of widespread fraud sufficient to alter the outcome, and emphasized the importance of legal processes for institutional trust. These positions signaled an initial divergence from Trump, prioritizing constitutional norms. In February 2021 interviews, Haley called for the Republican Party to refocus on substantive policy to rebuild appeal beyond Trump's influence. Tensions increased in 2022–2023 as Trump attacked Haley and other potential 2024 rivals for challenging his dominance, while Haley highlighted her fiscal conservative achievements, such as advocacy for balanced budgets. Despite alignments on policies like tax cuts and deregulation, the interactions revealed differences in style and strategy.

2024 reconciliation and endorsement

Haley suspended her presidential campaign on March 6, 2024, after defeats in most Super Tuesday contests. She stated that she had voiced alternatives for Americans but declined to endorse Donald Trump, advising him to earn support from her voters, including Republicans, independents, and Democrats. Haley held this position for months, emphasizing Trump's need to broaden appeal beyond the Republican base. She endorsed Trump on July 16, 2024, at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, calling for unity to defeat the Democratic nominee: "We have a country to save, and a unified Republican Party is essential to saving her." Amid audience boos but Trump's applause, Haley framed the contest as a binary choice against Democratic policies, marking a shift toward party consolidation. Following Trump's November 2024 victory, Haley affirmed no interest in his administration, having neither sought nor desired a role. Trump confirmed on November 9 that he would not include Haley or Mike Pompeo. The endorsement fostered GOP cohesion, aligning her voter coalition—around 20% of primary participants in key states—against Democrats and contributing to Republican gains, though some backers remained reluctant. It prioritized electoral success over primary rifts.

2024 presidential campaign

Announcement and strategy

Nikki Haley launched her campaign for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination on February 15, 2023, at a rally in Charleston, South Carolina, after releasing an announcement video the prior evening. She positioned the bid as a push for generational change to address economic stagnation and institutional issues, implicitly targeting the age of Donald Trump and Joe Biden. Haley highlighted her executive experience, including balancing budgets and cutting unemployment as South Carolina governor and advancing U.S. interests as U.N. ambassador. Her strategy focused on Haley as a governance-focused conservative to expand the GOP beyond its base, targeting suburban moderates and independents with her presidential readiness and stronger general-election prospects against Democrats. This aimed to present her as an electable unifier, building on bipartisan successes like economic reforms in South Carolina. The campaign raised about $11 million in its first quarter from Trump-skeptical donors, including Wall Street and establishment figures concerned about his legal issues, funding a media push on her leadership narrative despite challenges in countering Trump's primary dominance.

Primary performance

Haley achieved limited success in the 2024 Republican primaries, winning only the District of Columbia on March 4 with 63% of the vote and all 19 delegates, and Vermont on March 5 with about 50%. These victories highlighted her appeal in smaller, urban or moderate-leaning areas with open primaries allowing broader participation, in contrast to Trump's sweep of the other 14 Super Tuesday states where she received under 30% in most. In her home state of South Carolina, Haley lost decisively to Trump on February 24, receiving 39.5% to his 59.4%, despite her prior governorship. National polling averages showed her support peaking at 20-30% in late 2023 and early 2024, trailing Trump's consistent 50% or higher, as voters prioritized his prior presidency over her critiques of his age and governance disruptions. Super Tuesday on March 5 delivered a rout, with Trump securing over 800 delegates to her handful in base-heavy states. Haley suspended her campaign on March 6, acknowledging the insurmountable delegate gap without endorsing Trump.

Policy positions

Haley pledged continued U.S. military aid to Ukraine against the Russian invasion. She argued it offers moral clarity, deters broader conflict that could lead to World War III, and prevents Russia from emboldening China. She advocated confronting Russia, China, and Iran as key adversaries, citing their coordination in aggressions such as the October 7, 2023, Hamas attack on Israel, and vowed to stop funding nations that "hate America." On fiscal policy, Haley proposed balancing the federal budget through spending restraint and deregulation, without tax increases. She emphasized cuts to middle-class taxes and repeal of green energy subsidies from the Inflation Reduction Act to address deficits exceeding $2 trillion annually under prior administrations. She endorsed congressional term limits, signing a pledge for three House terms and two Senate terms to limit career politicians. Haley supported energy independence through expanded fossil fuel production, opposing regulatory barriers on oil and gas to shield U.S. prices from global volatility. She criticized climate policies that prioritize emissions cuts over economic realism. While acknowledging human-caused climate change, she opposed rejoining the Paris Accord and favored carbon capture over restricting hydrocarbons. She held pro-life views favoring state-level restrictions after fetal viability, with exceptions for rape, incest, and maternal life. Haley decried late-term abortions as morally indefensible and committed to federal laws saving the maximum feasible preborn lives. At a December 2023 town hall, Haley addressed the Civil War's causes by stressing states' rights and governmental overreach amid an 80-year national debate on slavery's morality. She later affirmed slavery as the war's fundamental evil while rejecting portrayals that minimize its role.

Withdrawal and aftermath

On March 6, 2024, Nikki Haley suspended her presidential campaign after Super Tuesday results left Donald Trump with an insurmountable lead in delegates, having won 14 of the 15 contests while Haley secured victories only in Vermont and the District of Columbia. In her announcement speech from Charleston, South Carolina, Haley stated she had "no regrets" about her bid, congratulated Trump on his primary successes, but withheld an endorsement, asserting that he must "earn" the support of her voters and address their concerns on issues like national debt and foreign alliances. Her campaign's end freed the roughly 97 delegates pledged to her under Republican National Committee rules, allowing them to vote independently at the July convention, though Trump's delegate majority rendered this symbolic. Haley's pivot toward party unity accelerated in the ensuing months. On May 22, 2024, she publicly declared her intent to vote for Trump, emphasizing the need for him to broaden his appeal while criticizing Democratic policies on inflation and border security. By July 16, 2024, during a prime-time address at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Haley delivered a "strong endorsement" of Trump, calling for Republicans to set aside differences and unify against Kamala Harris, whom she described as representing failed leadership on global threats and domestic priorities. This shift highlighted overlaps in conservative stances, such as robust support for Israel and Ukraine aid, fiscal restraint, and opposition to China, which aligned her voter base with Trump's platform despite prior frictions. Pre-election surveys revealed divisions among Haley's primary supporters, particularly college-educated suburban Republicans and independents, with some polls indicating up to 20-30% openness to Harris or third-party options due to concerns over Trump's style and legal issues. Mainstream outlets amplified narratives of a fractured GOP, predicting defections that could jeopardize Trump's chances in swing states. However, these projections overstated the split, as Trump's November 5, 2024, victory—securing 312 electoral votes and a 1.5 percentage point popular vote margin—demonstrated broad Republican consolidation, including gains among educated white voters and suburbs where Haley polled strongly in primaries. The outcome underscored causal factors like shared policy priorities on economy and security, which outweighed stylistic differences, countering claims of irreparable party damage.

Post-2024 political involvement

Advocacy and public roles

In April 2024, Haley joined the Hudson Institute as the Walter P. Stern Chair, focusing on national security threats and foreign policy challenges. In this role, she has delivered addresses on topics such as the risks of U.S. national security weakness amid global tensions. In July 2025, Haley advocated for the Trump administration to release Jeffrey Epstein-related files, arguing that transparency would restore public trust. She stated, "Release the Epstein files and let the chips fall where they may," framing the issue as one of accountability. Haley has maintained an active speaking schedule in 2024 and 2025, delivering keynotes on leadership, economic development, and governance at events such as the Upstate SC Alliance's annual meeting in February 2025, various policy forums, and the 47G Zero Gravity Summit in November 2025, where she addressed global security. Despite her 2024 endorsement of Trump, Haley did not join his second administration. Trump stated in November 2024 that she would not receive a formal role, citing strategic differences. Haley indicated no interest in such a position, prioritizing independent advocacy through think tanks and public commentary.

Current positions and influence

In 2025, Nikki Haley holds the Walter P. Stern Chair at the Hudson Institute, a conservative think tank focused on national security and foreign policy. There, she has critiqued U.S. tariffs on India as straining ties with a democratic partner needed to counter China, advocating instead for rebuilding the relationship through shared values and economic cooperation. Haley also addresses fiscal discipline, citing her South Carolina vetoes exceeding $900 million in spending, and contrasts this with federal deficits under both parties. She proposes reallocating portions of the $46 billion annual U.S. foreign aid—often directed to non-allies—to domestic needs and security partners, while urging cost-benefit scrutiny of expenditures amid confrontations with Russia and China. Drawing on her prior roles, Haley supports Republican fundraising to counter party isolationism. Her 2024 endorsement of Donald Trump has aligned her views with base priorities through security-focused collaborations. She serves as vice chair at Edelman Global Advisory, providing advice on international strategy.

Political ideology and views

Fiscal conservatism

Nikki Haley's fiscal conservatism emphasizes balanced budgets, tax reductions, and spending restraint to promote economic growth without increasing government debt or taxpayer burdens. As South Carolina governor from 2011 to 2017, her administration maintained annual balanced budgets, fully funded reserves, and reduced debt service by over $40 million through efficiencies and targeted cuts. She vetoed over 100 spending items in her final budget, including $65 million in expenditures, to uphold discipline during post-recession recovery. Haley opposed tax increases, rejecting gas tax hikes while advocating corporate income tax elimination to boost competitiveness. Under her leadership, the state added approximately 242,000 private-sector jobs by 2016 without broad tax hikes, crediting deregulation and business-friendly policies that attracted investments such as Boeing expansions. On federal entitlements, Haley supports reforms including work requirements, means-testing, and gradually raising the retirement age for younger workers to ensure solvency without changing benefits for current retirees. She opposes debt ceiling increases lacking spending caps or offsets, arguing they foster bipartisan fiscal irresponsibility. This reflects her emphasis on structural spending limits for long-term solvency over deficit-financed expansions.

Social conservatism

Nikki Haley identifies as pro-life, citing her experiences with infertility and adoption. As governor of South Carolina from 2011 to 2017, she signed a 20-week abortion restriction into law on May 25, 2016, prohibiting the procedure after that stage except in cases of fetal abnormality or risk to the mother's life. During her 2024 presidential campaign, she stated she would have signed the state's six-week "heartbeat" bill and supported state-level restrictions with exceptions for rape, incest, and maternal health, while opposing national bans. Haley opposes gender ideology in public schools, transgender participation in women's sports, and gender-changing surgeries for minors. She has stated that parents, not schools or government, should guide children on gender-related matters. She critiques identity politics, advocating merit and qualifications over demographic-based preferences. Following the June 17, 2015, Charleston church shooting, Haley called for removing the Confederate flag from state capitol grounds on June 22, 2015, a decision ratified by the legislature. She described the flag as representing heritage for some and having been "hijacked" by the shooter, and expressed no regret despite criticism from heritage advocates.

Foreign policy hawkishness

Nikki Haley advocates confronting totalitarian regimes through strength, deterrence, and strategic alliances, opposing isolationism and unchecked multilateralism. As U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations from 2017 to 2018, she criticized the organization for bias against American interests and Israel, vetoing resolutions targeting Israel while pointing to inconsistencies in addressing threats from Iran, North Korea, and Syria. She favored bilateral agreements and targeted pressures over broad UN consensus, arguing that its structure allows authoritarian states to undermine democratic security. Haley supports sustained pressure on Iran and North Korea to limit nuclear programs and terrorism backing, warning that lenient approaches risk Iran replicating North Korea's nuclear advances. In June 2025, during Israel-Iran tensions, she opposed U.S. involvement in regime change but endorsed Israeli strikes on sites like Natanz and Fordow to address threats without overcommitment. In January 2026, she stated that negotiation with the Iranian regime is impossible, positing its collapse would end major terrorism sources and promote Middle East peace under the Trump administration. She describes Iran, North Korea, Russia, and China as an "axis of dictators," favoring sanctions and isolation to disrupt their alignment, including in response to the 2023 Russia-North Korea pact. On Ukraine, Haley backs military aid to Kyiv to counter Russian aggression, contending that concessions to Vladimir Putin could precipitate wider conflict and encourage expansionist powers. Regarding China, she opposes uncritical trade and technology engagement, recommending removal of Chinese influence from U.S. critical sectors like agriculture and education, economic decoupling to counter subsidies, and military strengthening against Pacific aims. Her June 2023 plan proposes banning Chinese land acquisitions near military bases, curbing technology transfers, and forging alliances resistant to coercion. Haley regards Israel as a key defense against Iran-supported jihadist groups, supporting its actions at the UN and unconditional aid to eliminate organizations like Hamas, which she considers barriers to peace. Her positions emphasize deterrence, citing outcomes from pressure strategies, over diplomacy with unreliable counterparts.

Personal life

Marriage and family

Nikki Haley married Michael Haley, a major in the South Carolina Army National Guard, on September 7, 1996, in Hilton Head, South Carolina, following their meeting as students at Clemson University. The couple held two ceremonies—one Sikh and one Methodist—after postponing the event due to Hurricane Fran. The Haleys have two children: daughter Rena, born in 1999, and son Nalin, born in 2002. Rena Haley, who has been involved in her mother's political activities, announced her pregnancy with a daughter in July 2025. Michael Haley's military service has included multiple deployments, notably a yearlong assignment to Djibouti in support of U.S. Africa Command from June 2023 to April 2024, during which Nikki Haley managed family responsibilities alongside her presidential campaign. She has described these periods as challenging yet a source of pride, highlighting the resilience required of military families in balancing service and home life. The family maintained stability through these separations, with Michael Haley returning home in April 2024 to rejoin his wife and children.

Religious faith and heritage

Nikki Haley was born to Sikh immigrant parents from Punjab, India, and raised attending Sikh temple services with her family. She converted to Christianity in her early twenties, undergoing baptism in the United Methodist Church and later attending Baptist churches. Haley has stated that Christianity shapes her personal convictions and public life. In public statements, Haley has acknowledged her Indian-Sikh background, including her parents' cultural practices, while committing to Christianity. Throughout her career, she has credited her Christian faith with informing leadership decisions on policy challenges and has called for a return to foundational values of faith and freedom.

Writings

Authored books

Nikki Haley authored Can't Is Not an Option: My American Story, published on April 3, 2012, by Sentinel. The memoir recounts her upbringing in a family-owned business facing financial hardships, her entry into politics, and early challenges as governor of South Carolina. In With All Due Respect: Defending America with Grit and Grace, released on November 12, 2019, by St. Martin's Press, Haley critiques leadership in prior administrations on foreign policy and national security. Drawing from her United Nations ambassadorship, the book discusses direct engagement with adversaries and defense of U.S. interests, including responses to Syrian chemical attacks and North Korean threats. Her third book, If You Want Something Done: Leadership Lessons from Bold Women, published on October 4, 2022, by St. Martin's Press, profiles historical and contemporary women leaders who achieved results through decisive action and resilience. It integrates Haley's own experiences to illustrate patterns of success in male-dominated fields.

Honors and awards

Notable recognitions

In 2017, Time magazine named Nikki Haley one of 46 women changing the world for her role as U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations. That year, Forbes included her on its list of the world's 100 most powerful women, recognizing her economic reforms as South Carolina governor. Haley received the 2016 Global Vision Award from World Trade Center South Carolina for expanding international trade and job growth as governor. In 2022, the Congressional Medal of Honor Society presented her with its Patriot Award for initiatives supporting military families, including tax relief and veteran employment programs.

References

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