- Natalie Harp joined Trump's communications team in March 2022 after quitting her job at One America Network - the second OAN employee to do so
- The young blonde is often seen accompanying the 2024 presidential candidate on his daily golfing trips to be readily available to show positive press to him
- At the 2020 Republican National Convention, the cancer survivor cited Trump's Right to Try law for saving her by allowing her to use experimental treatments
- Trump's glamorous assistant left her hosting job at the conservative One America Network to take a plum role in the former president's communications team.
Natalie Harp, 31, was the second OAN employee to jump ship for Trump's team - after Christina Bobb left a year ago - and took up the job in March 2022, having quit as host of The Real Story.
The young blonde comes from a devout Christian family and recently tragically lost her father, Dr Robert Harp, an esteemed and highly-respected entrepreneur and executive at the Biola University in Los Angeles
Harp is often seen accompanying the 2024 presidential candidate, 76, on his daily golfing trips, riding in her own golf cart that is specially equipped with a laptop and computer so she can readily show Trump positive stories about himself.
On Wednesday, the pair were seen cruising around Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, where Harp was seen wearing a chic pink tennis outfit with a black skirt and skintight hot pink top with a matching hat. She accessorized with a comfortable pair of white tennis shoes.
At one point during their outing, she was seen pulling him over to show him something on her phone after climbing up a small hill to get to his own cart
Harp's links to Trump go back several years - and in 2019 she credited a healthcare policy introduced by the then-President for saving her life as she battle bone cancer
She said the Right to Try law, signed by Trump in 2018, allowed her to seek an effective treatment for her Stage 2 bone cancer after others had failed. Harp was diagnosed with cancer in 2015 and tried chemotherapy twice unsuccessfully before finding 'another oncologist who was willing to try a different approach.'
'I'm not dying from cancer any more thanks to President Trump, I'm living with cancer,' Harp said in 2019.