Nikki Haley Biography Flash a weekly Biography.
Let’s catch up on Nikki Haley’s recent headlines—because, as always, she’s never far from the political tempest. In the past few days, a striking incident from her visit to Israel has dominated the news cycle. While there, Haley, the former South Carolina governor and UN ambassador, knelt down with a purple pen and wrote “Finish Them!” on an artillery shell—an image now ricocheting across social platforms and international headlines, according to Responsible Statecraft. She later clarified that by “them,” she meant Hamas, referencing the group’s October 7th attack on Israel, and she’s stood firm that “Israel, they’re the good guys,” no matter the collateral toll. But the act—and the words—came just days after Israel was condemned for an airstrike on a displaced persons camp that left dozens dead and hundreds injured. The stunt was not subtle. Amnesty International swiftly called it out, saying “conflict is no place for stunts,” while Democratic Congressman Jamal Bowman called her language “genocidal.” Meanwhile, commentator Wajahat Ali framed Haley’s rhetoric as emblematic of how a Republican administration could be even more hawkish on Gaza than Biden’s. That kind of moment rarely fades from a political biography, especially for a figure who still hovers on the national stage.
On the domestic front, there’s no new Senate confirmation hearing or presidential run announcement—her 2024 campaign is done, after all, though her weekly SiriusXM talk show reportedly continues through early 2025, according to Fortune. But she’s leveraging that platform to snipe at media figures, most recently the “Morning Joe” hosts Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski, whom she accused of cozying up to Trump solely for ratings, according to AOL. Haley, once Trump’s UN ambassador, is still carving out space as a critic from the right, even while Trump himself has made clear she won’t be back in his cabinet if he wins again, as Fortune notes.
Business-wise, Haley took to social media to criticize both Biden and Trump’s approach to Intel, slamming the government’s decision to buy a stake in the chipmaker—even as she carefully avoided naming Trump directly, which earned her some scrutiny online, according to 2Paragraphs. In global affairs, she was recently part of a high-level, invite-only transatlantic discussion hosted by Edelman and the Centre for European Policy Studies, per CEPS, where she weighed in on US-EU relations in the age of grievance—probably catnip for her neocon followers but so far not a viral sensation.
No major new book, no surprise campaign announcement, and no high-profile endorsement drama in the past 24 hours. But what this week has shown is Nikki Haley’s knack for staying relevant—even polarizing—on the world stage, where every pen stroke can become a headline. For more on Haley’s latest moves, and for deep dives on other political heavyweights, subscribe so you never miss an episode of Biography Flash, your source for up-to-the-minute profiles. And search “Biography Flash” for more great biographies, whenever you need a fix.
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