Harlan Hill

Harlan Hill
Born Harlan Zachry Hill
(1990-11-12) November 12, 1990
Charleston, South Carolina, USA
Residence Charleston, South Carolina
Washington, District of Columbia
New York, New York
Education Porter-Gaud School
Charleston Day School
Occupation TV Host
Entrepreneur
Political Consultant
Political party Democratic Party (2008–2016) Independent (2016–present)
Website harlanhill.com

Harlan Hill (born November 12, 1990) is an American television personality, internet entrepreneur and political consultant from Charleston, South Carolina. He is a political commentator on CNN, Fox News and Fox Business and often argues in support of policies and attitudes associated with the Donald Trump administration. As of 2017, Harlan sits on the Advisory Board of President Donald J. Trump’s re-election campaign.[1]

Democrats for Trump

Hill founded a Democrats for Trump coalition after Bernie Sanders' loss to Hillary Clinton in the 2016 Democratic Primary.[2] He used social media and television to urge Democrats to support Donald Trump in the United States presidential election, 2016.[3]

Television

In the United States, Hill appears regularly on The O'Reilly Factor, Justice with Judge Jeanine,[4] Mornings with Maria, Varney & Co., America’s News HQ,[5] Your World with Neil Cavuto, Fox & Friends, The Intelligence Report with Trish Regan, CNN Newsroom, and State of America with Kate Bolduan.

In August 2017 The Hollywood Reporter speculated that Harlan may be hired as a permanent replacement for Trump voices on CNN.[6]

Abroad, Hill appeared on Australia's 9 News' coverage of the 2016 United States Presidential Election with Karl Stefanovic and Laurie Oakes from New York's Times Square.[7][8] He also appears on BBC News and Sky News.

2020 Senate Campaign

In 2017, Harlan announced he is considering a run for the US Senate seat currently occupied by Senator Lindsey Graham.[9] Harlan announced his plans in light of Senator Graham’s opposition to President Donald J. Trump’s platform. In a tweet asking whether he should run, over 25,000 people encouraged Hill to enter the race. [10]

Footnotes

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