Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) warned that “MAGA would revolt” if former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley were to be included in a potential Trump administration, referring to speculation about Ms. Haley’s future.
“I thought you were gonna say Trump–Chris Christie talk, which you’d have a better chance of [President] Joe Biden running with [former President] Donald Trump than Chris Christie at this point,” Ms. Trump, who is married to Eric Trump, told the host.
Regarding Ms. Haley, she said: “Crazier things have happened. I don’t know. I would never say never with Donald J. Trump. Never say never.”
But Ms. Taylor Greene, a staunch Trump supporter, wrote that “MAGA would revolt if Nikki Haley were to even be given an internship in Trump’s next administration,” responding to the speculation.
“She represents the neocon establishment America last wing of the Republican Party that we are absolutely done with,” she added. “Also, she lied and said she would not run against Trump.”
Her comment about Ms. Haley was reposted by Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) on X, formerly known as Twitter.
Neither the Trump campaign nor the Haley campaign have responded to the speculation. Previously, Ms. Haley served as the Trump administration’s ambassador to the United Nations.
Meanwhile, the former president has been critical of Ms. Haley, calling her “birdbrain” on social media and painting her as untrustworthy and disloyal. He’s noted that before launching her campaign for president, Ms. Haley often publicly said she wouldn’t run against him.
Responding to his criticism, Ms. Haley told Fox News earlier this month that she believes his comments about her means that he believes her to be a threat to his standing in the polls. “Look, all these guys know that we’re surging in the polls so they’re all starting to hit,” she said.
Meanwhile, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis garnered 19 percent in the Register’s Iowa poll, while he also had about 12 percentage points in the RealClearPolitics average.
Other speculation about President Trump’s possible running mates in 2024 have included Arizona U.S. Senate candidate Kari Lake, former Fox News host Tucker Carlson, Mr. DeSantis, or Vivek Ramaswamy, also a GOP presidential candidate who has largely echoed the former president’s platform.
Last week, Mr. Carlson responded to speculation about joining a possible Trump ticket by suggesting that he would not. “God would have to yell at me very loud,” he said at a recent event.
Mr. DeSantis has previously said that he doesn’t want to be vice president, saying he’s only running for president, while Mr. Ramaswamy said in August that he would reject a vice president offer.
There has also been speculation that President Trump could tap Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.), who dropped out of the 2024 presidential race earlier this year, or former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson to become his vice president.
Endorsement
Meanwhile, Ms. Haley was endorsed earlier this week by New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu, who told a crowd that “we’re all in for Nikki Haley” during a recent event.“If you could put that bloc behind a single candidate, that’s probably a third of the vote,” he said. “I think in terms of the primary, [Mr. Sununu] would be especially influential among just that bloc of voters.” But he stressed that it wouldn’t be enough for Ms. Haley to win New Hampshire, which is the among the first primary states.