Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
National

Nikki Haley Gets Preliminary Approval For Cabinet-Level Post

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Jan, 2017 10:31 AM
    Nikki Haley got the unanimous approval of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, clearing the first stage for becoming the first Indian American to be appointed to a cabinet-level post.
     
    Haley's nomination by President Donald Trump to be the US ambassador to the UN will now go before the full Senate for final approval. 
     
    Senate approval assured for her because of her popularity across the political divide as witnessed by the unanimous committee approval. 
     
    When she appeared before the panel last week, she got what was probably the best reception for a Trump nominee. At the confirmation hearings she criticised the UN for its paralysis, corruption and inefficiency and said that she would work to reform the world organisation. 
     
    The South Carolina Governor has no diplomatic or foreign policy experience which raised questions about her qualification for the post. 
     
    Democratic Party Senator Ben Cardin dismissed these doubts saying that her "track record of building coalitions in South Carolina" as governor makes suitable for a diplomatic job. She makes up for her lack of diplomatic experience through her "capability, intelligence," he added. 
     
    She has won high marks for her leadership of the southern, conservative state, particularly for getting the state leaders to agree to take down the flag of the Confederacy, the states supporting slavery, durign the Civil War. 
     
    It was considered a symbol of enduring racism. Haley has also spoke at her confirmation hearings about her achievements in negotiating with corporate leaders to get businesses to invest in her state, One of her successes was getting Boeing to set up a aircraft factory in the state. 
     
    She also spoke of her immigrant parents and her struggle as an Indian American child in racially polarised South Carolina. Her father Ajit Singh Randhwa, wearing a red turban, sat proudly behind her during the hearings. 
     
    After the hearings, committee chairperson Bob Corkr complimented her on her performance and said that she would have smooth-sailing in the Senate.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Stranger's Random Act Of Kindness Reaps Plaudits From B.C. Transit Police

    Stranger's Random Act Of Kindness Reaps Plaudits From B.C. Transit Police
    Transit officers came across the young woman outside a downtown Vancouver SkyTrain station on Dec. 1 with a hospital identification bracelet around her wrist in temperatures of -3 C.

    Stranger's Random Act Of Kindness Reaps Plaudits From B.C. Transit Police

    High Property Prices Mean Change Needed For Home Tax Breaks: Metro Vancouver

    High Property Prices Mean Change Needed For Home Tax Breaks: Metro Vancouver
      The regional board says it will push for the change ahead of the provincial election in May following an unprecedented rise in home prices.

    High Property Prices Mean Change Needed For Home Tax Breaks: Metro Vancouver

    Nurse Accused Of Killing Seniors Had Case Put Over Until January

    Nurse Accused Of Killing Seniors Had Case Put Over Until January
    The case of a nurse accused of killing eight seniors at two long-term care homes in southwestern Ontario has been put over until Jan. 6.

    Nurse Accused Of Killing Seniors Had Case Put Over Until January

    Attack On Toronto High School Thwarted, 17-year-old Under Arrest: Police

    Attack On Toronto High School Thwarted, 17-year-old Under Arrest: Police
      Det. Len Nicholson told reporters a news conference Wednesday night that the tip came from a member of the public on Dec. 1, when a person saw the threat on a blogging site.

    Attack On Toronto High School Thwarted, 17-year-old Under Arrest: Police

    B.C. Boy With Mysterious Broken Bones Returned To Parents After Abuse Ruled Out

    B.C. Boy With Mysterious Broken Bones Returned To Parents After Abuse Ruled Out
    VANCOUVER — While watching their son and daughter play in a home near Vancouver's children's hospital, a couple from northern British Columbia received the news they had been praying for.

    B.C. Boy With Mysterious Broken Bones Returned To Parents After Abuse Ruled Out

    Canadian Man In Video Of Scuffle With Chicago Policeman Sues

    Canadian Man In Video Of Scuffle With Chicago Policeman Sues
    A 61-year-old Canadian man who was arrested after a scuffle with an off-duty Chicago police officer is suing the officer.

    Canadian Man In Video Of Scuffle With Chicago Policeman Sues