Categories: Politics

South Carolina lawmaker blasts Nikki Haley over stance on Obama refugee resettlement program as governor

A South Carolina lawmaker blasted GOP presidential candidate Nikki Haley for her alleged support for “Obama’s refugee resettlement program” during her time as governor. 

“I was serving on county council almost 10 years ago, when we had to tell Nikki Haley, by resolution, to stop supporting Obama’s refugee resettlement program,” South Carolina state Rep. Stewart Jones, a Republican, said in a clip originally shared by the MAGA War Room account on X earlier this month and reposted Monday by Team Trump. 

Fox News Digital reached out to Jones and Haley’s campaign for comment on Monday, but did not immediately hear back. 

In November 2015, Haley, then the governor of South Carolina, specifically asked the State Department not to resettle Syrian refugees in the Palmetto State amid growing concern from local lawmakers in the wake of a series of coordinated Islamist terrorist attacks carried out in Paris, France, and the city’s northern suburb, Saint-Denis, that killed 130 people. 

HALEY: CONGRESS IS ‘LYING TO THE AMERICAN PEOPLE’ BY TYING FOREIGN AID TO BORDER SECURITY

Nikki Haley hosted a rally in Conway on Jan. 28, 2024, as part of her swing in the Palmetto State leading up to Saturday’s South Carolina primary. (Peter Zay/Anadolu via Getty Images)

Then-President Obama’s administration had vowed to accept about 10,000 Syrian refugees over a 12-month period at the time, according to WYFF, but South Carolina lawmakers expressed concern to Haley about the vetting process of refugees from conflict zones, citing how French authorities said a Syrian passport was found near one of the attackers, and the Paris prosecutor’s office said fingerprints from one of the attackers matched those of someone who passed through Greece just a month earlier. 

Haley said she still supported groups like Lutheran Services of the Carolinas and the World Relief Organization bringing refugees into South Carolina from elsewhere in the world, including areas like the Congo, Burma, Ukraine and Iraq, acknowledging in a letter to then-Secretary of State John Kerry that such migrants often are fleeing religious persecution. 

South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley holds a news conference for the Republican Governors Association at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce on Feb. 23, 2015. Republican and Democratic governors met with President Barack Obama at the White House during the association’s winter meeting. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

“As Governor, it is my first and primary duty to ensure the safety of the citizens of South Carolina. We are a state that has proudly welcomed refugees from around the world as part of the United States Refugee Resettlement Program…. While I agree that the United States should try to assist individuals in such dire situations, it is precisely because of the situation in Syria that makes their admission into the United States a potential threat to our national security,” she wrote to Kerry at the time. “For that reason, I ask that you honor my request and not resettle any Syrian refugees in South Carolina.”

OBAMA PLAN FOR SYRIAN REFUGEES SCRAMBLED BY STATE OPPOSITION

Haley also mentioned how two interpreters who worked with her husband in Afghanistan were brought over through the U.S. resettlement program under Obama. 

Protesters at the South Carolina Statehouse during a demonstration in response to the Trump administration’s executive order blocking entry of refugees and travelers from seven predominantly Muslim countries on Jan. 31, 2017. (Sean Rayford/Getty Images)

“These are people who have protected our troops. These are people being persecuted for being Christian. These are people being hurt because of their political beliefs. These are people who we took in because they weren’t safe where they were,” Haley said at the time, according to WIS-TV. 

Haley is competing against former President Trump in the South Carolina GOP primary on Feb. 24. 

The Obama administration pledged in 2016 to bring in more than 110,000 refugees from around the world in that fiscal year – an issue that sparked heated debate during the presidential election cycle, with Trump and others raising concern that terrorists could be among them. 

Last month, Jones announced that he’s running for the U.S. House in South Carolina’s 3rd Congressional District. 

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Trump has the backing of most Republican state and federal elected officials in South Carolina in the 2024 race despite Haley serving as governor from 2011 to 2017. 
Trump tapped Haley to serve in his administration as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. 

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