Five months in, Nikki Haley is still waiting for her moment

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Nikki Haley, the former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, and her allies feel like they'll soon prove the doubters wrong. Her rivals aren't worried.
Five months later, she’s at 4.4%.
But in Haley’s telling, and that of her allies, she’s got everyone right where she wants them: doubting her.
“I have been underestimated in everything I have ever done,” Haley told a crowd of northern New Hampshire voters this month. “And it’s a blessing, because it makes me scrappy.”
At the town hall here, Haley, the former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations and twice-elected governor of South Carolina, explained that she’s well familiar with having to overcome small poll numbers, low name ID and minimal press coverage.
There was her first run for the state Legislature in 2004, when she unseated a longtime incumbent after entering the race with little fanfare. Then there was her first gubernatorial run in 2010, when she emerged from a deep field of well-known contenders.
“I was ‘Nikki who?’” she said. “I had 3% in the polls. I had the least amount of money. And I worked South Carolina like no one else and won.”
What’s more, several Republicans who spoke with NBC News said they did not expect Haley’s fortunes to soon change. Terry Sullivan, the former campaign manager of Florida Sen. Marco Rubio’s 2016 presidential bid, said Haley’s message has been too “muddled.”
She’s tried to tout her time as U.N. ambassador while running against Trump, the man who gave her the position. She’s pushed a strong foreign policy message, even though her primary experience in that area was representing the United States at an institution conservatives loathe. And she has tried to both tout her unique background as the daughter of Indian immigrants and the first female governor of South Carolina while at the same time criticizing identity politics.
“She tries to be the Goldilocks candidate,” Sullivan said. “And it’s going to take a really clean message to cut through and resonate with primary voters that clearly want an alternative to Trump but just aren’t seeing it out there.”
“When people see her, they’re going to really be pleasantly surprised,” former New Hampshire state Rep. Kim Rice, a Haley supporter, said. “And I think we’re going to see a big shift.”
On the stump, Haley’s pitch centers on a more muscular foreign policy — namely countering China and supporting Ukraine in the ongoing war with Russia — curbing the national debt by reforming entitlement programs and offering more moderate messaging on social issues when compared to the primary field writ large. They are positions that may help her with some Trump-weary voters and traditional conservatives but have her largely out-of-step with much of the primary electorate.
“Nikki’s not out there fighting social issues that affect the 1 and 2 percenters; she’s fighting issues that affect every family — and that’s their pocketbooks,” South Carolina state Rep. Chris Wooten, a Haley supporter, said. “And their protection.”
In North Conway, voters said they weren’t committed Haley backers but wanted to get to know her better as they weighed their primary vote and looked to find who could best take on Trump.
“I’m here to listen. I’m giving her a chance to convince me that I ought to at least pay attention,” said Greg Wannenwetsch, a Center Harbor, New Hampshire, resident who attended Haley’s town hall here. “I’m disappointed that Trump has obliterated everybody so far. I want to see a real campaign. And I don’t want to see everybody get defeated before this ever starts.”
But, he added: “I’m afraid she might not be conservative enough for me.”
Haley’s pitch is geared toward winning in November, something she nods to when talking about how the GOP has lost the popular vote in seven of eight national elections and hasn’t been winning many major races in recent years.
“She’s got all the tools,” a Republican operative not working for a presidential candidate said, speaking on condition of anonymity. “She’s been tested; she’s won from behind. She’s been the person at the bottom of the polling heap. She’s gotten big things done. She’s dynamic on the stump; she interacts with voters. She’s got a small, lean staff. She’s built up a lot of favors around the country, helping candidates in tough election cycles from the years past. So she has the right type of operation. It’s just whether she’ll ever be able to kick it into another gear.”
There have been positive developments in recent days on the fundraising front. The Haley campaign raised more than $5.3 million this quarter and has north of $6.8 million in cash on hand, nearly $3 million more than it began the second quarter with, according to the campaign’s filing with the Federal Election Commission.
Team Haley, Harris said, is “about to enter the second phase of the campaign,” and he said the super PAC “will fund an aggressive voter contact campaign to increase awareness about Nikki” in the coming weeks.
“While it’s unlikely there will be tremendous polling movement before the end of the year, our effort is to build the base for Nikki, whose incredible track record, talent for retail politics and determination to win will allow her to make a strong late move in New Hampshire and Iowa,” Harris wrote.
Haley is continuing to face a problem that has plagued the entire GOP field: how to distinguish oneself from Trump without alienating his base, which is needed to win.
“You can sell them on Nikki Haley. I know how to do that,” Iowa state Rep. Austin Harris, a Haley backer, said of voters. “But how do you convince them to move on from President Trump?”
When asked if Haley could emerge from the pack of challengers to seriously challenge Trump for the nomination, one Trump campaign official flatly responded, “No.”
“She was like the No. 1 requested surrogate in 2022,” this person added. “And you’d have thought that she’d have found a way to parlay that and cash in all those chips, but they just haven’t been able to.”
A potential warning sign for her bid: Haley has found tough sledding in the battle for endorsements in her home state — which also hosts a critical early primary contest. Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C., for whom Haley campaigned in a bruising primary against a Trump-backed rival, has remained neutral. Many others have flocked to back Scott’s candidacy or are linking up with Trump or DeSantis.
“Nikki’s got a lot of enemies,” one South Carolina political operative said of Haley’s standing with GOP leaders throughout the state.
Many of Haley’s supporters, while offering Scott praise, said the former governor had had to take more hard positions in the state than Scott did and has battled through tougher campaigns.
“Tim’s never had to piss anybody off,” said South Carolina state Rep. Nathan Ballentine, a Haley supporter.
Haley was a rising star who was long thought of as presidential timber, particularly for her handling of the aftermath of the 2015 Charleston church shooting that left nine Black worshippers dead at the hands of a white supremacist. Haley attracted national attention — including a fair amount of praise from unlikely allies — for removing the Confederate flag from Statehouse grounds.
“I heard a lot of, ‘Are you kidding me?’ … People were not happy about it,” she said, adding, “She’s got to have traction in her own home state or she’s not going anywhere.”
All eyes are now aimed at the first primary debate next month, which Haley’s supporters believe can shake up the field regardless of whether Trump ultimately shows up.
“The debate is going to be the inflection point,” Wooten said. “I think the race is going to change dramatically in the fall. Right now, I think she’s in third, fourth place, whatever the numbers say today. But I know that she’s building a grassroots operation. She’s not worried.”
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