“She’ll do interviews, take listener calls, and talk politics on the show, which will be carried on Wednesdays from 8 to 9 a.m. ET on the satellite radio system’s Triumph channel. Expect some talk mixed in about Clemson football, her passion for running and music — maybe even Taylor Swift,” the Associated Press reported.
Haley stated that while she won’t keep her personal political views a secret, she did wish to escape some of the media’s “predominant tribalism.”
“My kids, they don’t watch the news, because they think both sides are crazy,” she told The Associated Press. “And they’re not wrong about that. I think we have to take the craziness out. I think we have to take the noise out and I think we have to break things down in a way that people feel empowered.”
“I think that’s what Americans are tired of,” Haley said. “They don’t want to go on and watch a news show and know exactly which candidate they’re pushing and exactly what politics are pushing. They want to know the issues. They want to know exactly how it’s going to affect their family. I want to take all of the politics out and really break it down on a policy level.”
Haley said she’s open to continuing the show past January “if Americans like what they hear.”
Haley took to X, formerly known as Twitter, and posted: “We spoke hard truths on the campaign trail. It’s time to speak hard truths about the future of America. No spin. Just facts and straight talk in a way that everyone can understand. We have a country to save. Let’s do this.”
Haley was the final contender for the Republican nomination this year remaining from the former president Donald Trump.
Although she gave her support and endorsement to Trump before the convention, she hadn’t asked for her assistance from Trump throughout the general election campaign until the past two weeks.