Fox News88%
Nikki Haley’s son urges GOP to step in as Gen Z reaches breaking point on jobs, housing0%
By Taylor Penley0%
12/1/2025, 3:58:15 PM
BS Summary: This article contains 22 faulty reasoning types, including Negativity Bias, In-Group Bias, and Appeal to Emotion, with Hasty Generalization as the most egregious example at 42.7% saturation with 162 hits. Analysis detected 1,429 faulty-reasoning hits from 379 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 0% and a BS Rank of 0% (0 of 16,813 articles). This article is better (less manipulative) than 100.00% of the article peer group.
Former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley's son Nalin Haley on Monday accused Republicans of failing to acknowledge disillusioned Gen Z voters' struggles with unemployment and affordability.
"The first step our leaders need to do is admit that we have a problem.
And right now I haven't heard any Republican leaders talk about the issues that young people are facing," Haley told "Fox & Friends."
"Congress has been nothing more than a glorified nursing home.
They either don't know the problems that we're facing or they're ignoring them.
And to be honest, I don't know which one's worse."
The Gen Z conservative activist lamented that the jobs and housing markets are failing young Americans who did everything as expected – going to college and graduating from prestigious schools – only to discover that building their lives beyond college has become a challenge.
"One-third of recent college graduates are unemployed," he said.
"My friend group all graduated with great degrees in great schools, and not one of them has a job – not one.
So it's frustrating because they did everything that they were supposed to do.
They put in the time, the effort, the money to get educated, and they don't have a job to show for it.
They have to compete with foreign workers who are willing to work for half their salary and AI, which is a supercomputer, so how can we compete with that?"
Haley pivoted to the housing market, which has become a major pain point for adults looking to buy their first home.
As of December, the typical age of the first-time homebuyer in America reached an all-time high of 40, according to findings from the National Association of Realtors (NAR).
"Five years ago it was 33," Haley lamented.
"My parents bought their first house for $90,000 in the late 90s, and now it's probably worth over $400,000, so we're facing a lot of issues."
To address the issues young voters are facing, Haley proposed banning H-1B visas to ensure corporations hire Americans first.
"I think that we need to stop subsidizing illegal immigrants for housing and instead maybe look into subsidizing Americans for first-time homebuyers for housing, and not allow corporations in the Chinese Communist Party to buy entire neighborhoods of single-family homes," he added.
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