Photo of Nikki Haley

Haley Campaign Press Release - Haley Brings "Try That in a Small Town" to the Upstate

July 21, 2023

GREENVILLE, S.C. – Thursday night, presidential candidate Nikki Haley campaigned in Greenville, S.C., holding a packed town hall where she took voters' questions.

Breitbart: "Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley played country star Jason Aldean's latest single, 'Try That in a Small Town,' for the crowd at one of her campaign's town hall events on Thursday.

"'You all know I love music,' Haley tweeted along with a video of the event. 'Tonight in Greenville we added a new song to the playlist: Jason Aldean's Try That in a Small Town.'" (Breitbart, 7/20/23) The State's Joseph Bustos: "Haley talking about efforts in China to build hypersonic missiles, develop artificial intelligence and other high tech weapons. 'Don't tell me that's a competitor. That's not a competitor, that's an enemy,' Haley said." (Twitter, 7/20/23)

The Associated Press' Meg Kinnard: "'What has Congress done for you lately?' @NikkiHaley asks. 'We need to fight for term limits once & for all.' Haley also reiterates call for politician 'mental competency tests,which she said could incl 'how many grandchildren you have' - a Biden ref that got big laughs." (Twitter, 7/20/23)

WYFF News: "With less than a year away from the South Carolina Republican primary, presidential hopeful Nikki Haley stopped in her home state Thursday to remind South Carolinians of her accomplishments while governor. She also took time to make voters know where she stands on key issues." (WYFF News, 7/21/23) Post and Courier: "Haley doubled down on security at the southern border, saying the U.S. is too lenient currently and that border patrol officers told her they're 'glorified babysitters' on a recent trip she took to the border. She said would add 25,000 border patrol and immigration officers as president." (Post and Courier, 7/21/23)

Nikki Haley, Haley Campaign Press Release - Haley Brings "Try That in a Small Town" to the Upstate Online by Gerhard Peters and John T. Woolley, The American Presidency Project https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/node/369994

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