What Republican Insiders Say About Haley Taking on Trump

The South Carolina governor got the attention of RNC members.

“I don’t know if it was necessarily beneficial,” Saul Anuzis, a former RNC member from Michigan, told ABC News, adding that it’s early to be worrying about the general election. “She has every right to express her opinion. She’s a leader in the party.”

“I think some people are looking at the tone and the rhetoric you’re seeing today and are worried about the general,” he said. “But we’re not at that stage yet. We’re still firing up the base.”

And while Utah Republican chair James Evans agreed with Haley on toning down the rhetoric, he told ABC News that the issue is broader than one candidate.

“It’s larger than just Donald Trump: it’s about a way to be engaged in politics,” he said. “It set the tone also for how we have to be straightforward and honorable in our engagement. She called out what we haven’t been doing,” he said.

Arkansas’ Jonelle Flumer didn’t have a problem with the jabs, but speculated to ABC News about the potential fallout. “I don’t mind her pushing back,” she said. “I guess we’ll wait and see if that helps or hurts, because he seems to always come out on top.”

But more conservative wings of the party – including influential talk radio hosts – were more upset about Haley’s comments.