Natalie Harp

Natalie Harp (born 1992 (age 32) ) is an American former television personality who works as an aide for former president Donald Trump.

Early life
Harp is from a conservative Christian family in California. Her father is an estate agent who founded a marketing and branding consultancy for travel companies and was the head of an "office of innovation" at a private Christian university.

From 2009 to 2012, Harp studied at Point Loma Nazarene University, a Christian liberal arts college in San Diego. In 2015, she graduated with a MBA from Liberty University, an evangelical college in Virginia.

Career
In 2019, Harp said in an interview with Fox News that a 2018 "Right to Try" law enacted by then-President Donald Trump had saved her from dying of cancer. Harp later joined Trump's 2020 presidential campaign. She delivered a speech at that year's Republican National Convention, where she compared Trump to George Bailey from It's a Wonderful Life, claiming that "Without you, I'd have died waiting for [experimental drugs] to be approved". Harp's claims were called into question by former Food and Drug Administration (FDA) official Peter Lurie and Simon Fraser University professor of health sciences Jeremy Snyder. Snyder noted that Harp had been given "an FDA-approved immunotherapy drug for an unapproved use", which had been allowed prior to Right to Try.

After 2020, Harp became an anchor for One America News Network, a far-right, pro-Trump cable channel known for its promotion of falsehoods and conspiracy theories. At the network, she promoted Trump's lie that the 2020 presidential election was stolen from him. She left the network in March 2022 to join Trump's communications team. The Washington Post reported that Harp "often accompanies Trump on his daily golf outings, riding the course in a golf cart equipped with a laptop and sometimes a printer to show him uplifting news articles, online posts or other materials."

In 2023, Harp joined Trump's 2024 presidential campaign. In 2024, The Bulwark reported, citing anonymous sources, that Harp was the staffer who had posted a video that included references to a "unified Reich" on Trump's Truth Social account. The post was deleted 15 hours later.