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3 minute read
A Conversation With Nalin Haley: Nikki Haley’s Son
Cate McCusker Senior Editor
just like anyone else’s. That relationship is seen in how supportive she was in his decision to come to Villanova.
“She had like a little Villanova pin, and she kept it by her bed every day,” Haley said, “Somehow she just knew that I was gonna go.”
His relationship with her is also shown through his strong support of her deciding to run. If he, and the rest of the Haley family, didn’t want Nikki Haley to run for president, she wouldn’t have done it.
“She’s always going to be a mom first, before anything,” he said, explaining that his family made this decision together, not too long ago.“She wouldn’t have done it if just one of us said no… It took the four of us.”
Haley is excited for his mom’s campaign, and although he knows it’s a long road ahead, he’s ready. He spoke proudly of her political career, specifically discussing her time as the governor of South Carolina.
“I’ve seen how she can react in difficult situations,” he said, referencing the historic flood in South Carolina in 2015 and the shooting at a Church in Charleston in which a white supremacist killed nine Black parishioners. “Just seeing how she handled that, how she put her citizens first… how she was able to hold the state together.”
Haley has been helping his mom during her campaign, and he plans to do more work on the campaign this summer.
“I finally won’t have school, so I can give everything,” he said, noting that he’ll have to pick up another job as well. “Then I’m going to work as a towel boy, because I have to make money.”
While he does fear for his mom’s physical safety sometimes, what mostly bothers him is the media.
“When you’re on the inside looking out, you realize how inaccurate things are,” he said.
“It becomes where you feel like they’re making the story rather than telling it, so that’s the frustrating part, it’s just a lot of the lies because you can’t do anything about it.”
CNN anchor Don Lemon recently commented on Haley’s campaign announcement. He specifically called for a new generation of politicians, as he said that she wasn’t “in her prime.” Haley was annoyed by Lemon’s comments, but he knows his mom is strong and that those comments wouldn’t bother her.
“A lot of people are… gonna come after her,” he acknowledged. “There’s nothing she can’t handle. I mean, criticism just bounces off of her.”
One of Haley’s biggest competitors in the primary will be former president Donald Trump, who is known for his aggressive rhetoric and nicknames for his opponents, including “sleepy Joe,” “crooked Hillary” and “Ron DeSanctimonious.”
Trump and Haley have an interesting relationship. Haley endorsed Marco Rubio in 2016, but she became the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations in 2017 under the Trump Administration, and now she is running against him.
Haley explained that he was not worried about what Trump’s rhetoric will be like towards his mother, and he also turned down the speculation that she could be looking to be Vice President if Trump wins the primary.
“We don’t go for a second place,” he said firmly. “We go for first.”
Haley got some pushback online this fall after speaking at a campaign event for Dr. Oz, the Republican candidate for the Senate, when she said she worried about her son every time he steps off campus. Although Haley was criticized for her remarks, due to Villanova’s location on the wealthy Main Line, Haley stood up for his mother.
“She’s doing her job as a mom to worry,” he explained. “I feel like, yes, while this is a relatively safe and if you even looked at what happened on campus, we had a lockdown, and no one would think that would happen in the area like this. She’s not wrong for worrying.”
Haley declined to comment on his mother’s statement that America is not a racist country during her campaign announcement, but he did want to add clarification on her call for term limits for Congress and for mental competency tests for politicians over 75 years old. Donald Trump is 76, and at 80 years old Joe Biden is the oldest person to hold the presidency.
“It’s about transparency in government and giving it back to the people instead of keeping it with older politicians in Washington who make laws that won’t even affect them,” he commented. If his mom does end up winning the election in 2024, Haley doesn’t expect much to change for them.
“Our family is always gon