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Washington’s UN envoy Haley resigns, rules out 2020 run for office

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WASHINGTON/UNITED NATIONS — Nikki Haley, a rising Republican star, said on Tuesday she was stepping down as US ambassador to the United Nations, but knocked down speculatio­n that she might challenge President Donald Trump at the next election.

Sitting beside Mr. Trump in the Oval Office, Ms. Haley said her 18-month stint at the United Nations had been “an honor of a lifetime” and that she would stay on until the end of the year.

A former governor of South Carolina and the daughter of Indian immigrants, Ms. Haley, 46, is the highest profile woman in Mr. Trump’s Cabinet and has often been seen as a possible presidenti­al candidate.

Ms. Haley criticized Mr. Trump during the 2016 election campaign but has been the face of his “America First” policies at the United Nations, steering the US withdrawal from several UN programs and ardently defending his hard-line policies against Iran and North Korea over their nuclear programs.

Ms. Haley said in her resignatio­n letter to Mr. Trump that she would “surely not be a candidate for any office in 2020” and would instead support his re-election bid. She referred to returning to the private sector and some media reports said she had debts to pay off.

But Ms. Haley also said she did not have any future plans set, and her decision surprised many at the White House and the United Nations.

Speaking to reporters later on Tuesday aboard Air Force One, Mr. Trump said he had five people on his short list for UN envoy, including former White House adviser Dina Powell, a friend of Ms. Haley. Mr. Trump said US ambassador to Germany, Richard Grenell, was not on the short list but that he was willing to consider him.

Mr. Trump’s eldest daughter Ivanka Trump, who is a senior adviser to her father, ruled herself out of considerat­ion in a Twitter post. He had said she would be “incredible” in the role and acknowledg­ed he would be accused of nepotism if he nominated her.

Mr. Trump said Ms. Haley had told him six months ago that she was thinking of leaving by the end the year “to take a little time off.” He was effusive in his praise of her.

“She has done an incredible job. She is a fantastic person, very importantl­y, but she also is somebody that gets it,” Mr. Trump said on Tuesday.

Ms. Haley’s name has come up as possible Republican running mate in the last two presidenti­al elections and she could also become a US senator if fellow South Carolina Republican Lindsey Graham takes up a job in the Mr. Trump administra­tion, as is often speculated.

The feel-good nature of her resignatio­n was markedly different from other high-profile departures from Mr. Trump’s Cabinet. Mr. Trump unceremoni­ously announced his firing of former secretary of state Rex Tillerson in March in a tweet.

Ms. Haley was seen by her counterpar­ts at the United Nations as a voice of clarity in a US administra­tion that often gave off mixed signals on foreign policy, diplomats say.

“Nikki Haley is one of the most talented, most authentic US government officials that I have ever met,” said UN ambassador for France, Francois Delattre. —

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