Like many politicians, former U.N. Ambassador and South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley began her career in business before running for office. Among the many overlaps between the two fields, both require selling the public on a given product. Exactly what that product is depends on the politician, their party affiliation and the potential buyers they wish to reach.
In running for president, Haley is on one level pitching herself, as we saw in her CNN town hall in Iowa on Sunday evening. She wishes to be seen as a viable candidate, one that donors should invest in, that volunteers should endorse to their neighbors, and that Republican primary voters should support at the ballot box. As a Republican, Haley is also selling herself as a representative of those primary voters — which means showing that she knows her audience.
Case in point: When CNN moderator Jake Tapper asked her to define “woke” — a buzzword on the right that even Trump has tired of defending — she decided to focus on the issue of “biological boys playing in girl sports.” She went on to call it the “women’s issue of our time” and pondered, “Are we supposed to get our girls used to the fact that biological boys are in their locker rooms? And then we wonder why a third of our teenage girls seriously contemplated suicide last year.”
It’s an abhorrent line of thinking. There are myriad reasons to be concerned about the teen suicide rate. But to link an upswing in ideation to cis girls supposedly being forced to share locker rooms with trans girls is ghoulish, and without evidence.
What makes the current primary season so troubling is how the Republican Party has rebranded itself in recent years to center grievance to the exclusion of other offerings.
It’s also sadly entirely in line with the arc of the modern GOP. That Republicans love peddling grievances is not a new development. When Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, ran for president, his pitch to voters was centered on competence, in line with the once ascendant business-dominated wing of the party. Underneath the hood though, Romney was still riding the backlash to President Barack Obama’s role as the first Black president. He was still selling GOP donors on the sentiments brought to light in leaked comments that “47% of the people who will vote [for Obama] are dependent on government, who believe that they are victims.”
Likewise, in the immediate post 9/11 years, candidates up and down the ballot sold Americans on being able to offer security in an unsafe world. That pitch necessitated framing immigration as primarily about border security and keeping America safe from threats, including drug cartels and terrorists sneaking into the country. That both of those groups were primarily brown foreigners made the case extra potent for many Republicans, tapping into fears that festered for years, until we’ve reached the point where the “Great Replacement” conspiracy theory is now mainstream.
Haley attempted to position herself as the sensible moderate on trans issues on Sunday, adding that “we do need to be humane” about trans kids. But that’s not a line that fires up the crowds. Even when she spoke out about her past leadership, including when she convinced lawmakers to take down the Confederate flag over the South Carolina statehouse in 2015, it was packaged as a grievance. Haley lamented that “the national media” for some reason wanted to make the shooting at Mother Emanuel church — where a white supremacist killed nine Black attendees — into being “about race.” The idea that race had anything to do with the shooting was offered up as just one more example of why Republican voters should be angry at how liberals are ruining things.
What makes the current primary season so troubling is how the Republican Party has rebranded itself in recent years to center grievance to the exclusion of other offerings. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is the prime example of this shift. Driven by his obsession with cultural flashpoints, his state’s crackdown on transgender rights and what it’s deemed “critical race theory” has been accepted as a template for the rest of the national party. On the stump, he has reflected the views of the extremely online segment of the GOP base, denouncing the so-called “Woke Mind Virus” and pledging to “destroy leftism” in this country.








