One by folks on the far right and one by The Wall Street Journal. South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley (R) gave the Republicans’ response to President Barack Obama’s vaporous SOTU.
Her conservative critics unloaded. “Trump should deport Nikki Haley” went one tweet. The next morning on Fox & Friends, Donald Trump declared that Gov Haley is “very weak on immigration.”
Of course, these are slurs and comments utterly devoid of facts, as the WSJ noted.
The woman who says “illegal immigration is not welcome in South Carolina?” Who signed a law toughening the state’s illegal immigration reform act, which requires employers to verify the immigration status of new hires? Who has fought President Obama’s bid to resettle unvetted Syrian refugees? And whose state has joined 16 others in a lawsuit against Mr Obama for what they say is his unconstitutional executive order on illegal immigration?
But then the WSJ committed its own error.
A party that rejects Nikki Haley as a spokeswoman is one that doesn’t really want to build a governing majority.
Conflating these criticizers with Republicans also is a claim devoid of fact, beyond the most narrow, literal sense.