Who Is Natalie Harp?
Have you heard of Natalie Harp? She may not be the most famous figure in Donald Trump’s circle, but her influence is undeniable. Some even call her “unfireable.”
A Rising Star in Trump’s Inner Circle
Getting close to Trump isn’t easy, but some say there’s a formula: be young, blonde, and deeply devoted to the former president. That strategy seems to have worked for Natalie Harp, a former far-right cable host turned official Trump aide.
Born in 1991, Harp is now 33 or 34 years old. She grew up in a conservative Christian family in California. Her father, an estate agent, also founded a marketing consultancy and led an innovation office at a private Christian university. Harp attended Point Loma Nazarene University from 2009 to 2012, then earned an MBA from Liberty University in 2015.
A Cancer Survivor and Trump Supporter
In 2019, Harp, a bone cancer survivor, credited Trump’s “Right to Try” law for saving her life. She shared her story on Fox News and later spoke at the Republican National Convention. Comparing Trump to George Bailey from It’s a Wonderful Life, she declared, “Without you, I’d have died waiting for [experimental drugs] to be approved.”
However, experts questioned her claims. Former FDA official Peter Lurie and health sciences professor Jeremy Snyder pointed out that Harp had received an FDA-approved drug for an unapproved use—something already permitted before the law passed.

From Media to Politics
After Trump’s election loss, Harp became an anchor for One America News Network (OANN), a far-right channel known for promoting conspiracy theories. She repeatedly pushed Trump’s false claims about election fraud.
In 2022, she left OANN to join Trump’s communications team. According to The Washington Post, she often accompanied Trump on golf outings, riding in a golf cart with a laptop and printer to show him favorable news articles. By 2024, she had joined his campaign, handling social media posts and even sending heated messages to major donors on Trump’s behalf.
The ‘Human Printer’
Harp’s dedication earned her a peculiar nickname: “Human Printer.” She followed Trump with a portable printer and battery pack, printing news clips and handing him flattering coverage—even running after him on the golf course.
Anonymous sources told The Times that Harp’s primary role was delivering positive, unchallenged news about Trump. Much of it came from Gateway Pundit, a far-right site notorious for spreading misinformation.
A Controversial Presence
Alex Isenstadt’s upcoming book, Revenge: The Inside Story of Trump’s Return to Power, details Harp’s growing presence in Trump’s inner circle. At times, she crossed boundaries. According to The Daily Mail, former First Lady Melania Trump once found Harp in Trump’s private Mar-a-Lago quarters late at night—an area usually off-limits to outsiders. Harp insisted she was just delivering documents.
Michael Wolff’s latest book reveals another alarming incident: the Secret Service considered Harp “a potential danger to herself as well as to the president.” She even wandered into Trump’s unoccupied bedroom on “Trump Force One” when it was being used as a decoy.
A New, Harsher Nickname
While some saw “Human Printer” as an innocent joke, Harp has now earned a more brutal moniker: “Fatal Attraction.”
According to Isenstadt, Trump advisers began comparing her to Alex Forrest, the obsessed character played by Glenn Close in Fatal Attraction. In the film’s most infamous scene, Forrest breaks into a married man’s home and boils his pet rabbit.
Despite her reputation as a campaign headache, Trump valued her loyalty. “Harp was his Girl Friday,” Isenstadt wrote. If Trump wanted a fiery Truth Social post, she sent it. If he needed a glowing but questionable article, she printed it. If he wanted to text a news story to a Republican lawmaker, she handled it.
Trump’s senior staff may have wanted her gone, but they knew the truth: Natalie Harp was unfireable.