Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Sunk by nanny issues

- JOSH ROGIN

State Department spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert withdrew herself from considerat­ion to be the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations last week, saying in a statement that “it is in the best interest of my family.”

Behind the scenes, her nomination faced complicati­ons because Nauert hired a foreign-born nanny about 10 years ago who didn’t have the proper work visa and Nauert didn’t pay proper taxes on time, according to two officials involved in her nomination process.

President Donald Trump announced his intent to nominate Nauert to be America’s top diplomat at the United Nations this past December, but he never officially sent the nomination over to the Senate for considerat­ion. That’s because her security investigat­ion was delayed while the administra­tion tried to figure out how to deal with the revelation­s.

On top of the already tepid response that Nauert’s expected nomination provoked from Senate Democrats, her confirmati­on process would have been grueling for her family, the officials said, so Nauert was honest when she said in her statement that she decided to withdraw with her family’s interests at heart.

The mere fact that Nauert’s paperwork had never been produced for the Senate Foreign Relations Committee was already causing frustratio­n and suspicion on Capitol Hill. Just hours before Nauert’s announceme­nt, Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.), the Foreign Relations Committee’s ranking Democrat, told me in an interview that Nauert’s nomination was delayed due to a vetting problem.

“There clearly is a problem when you don’t send her paperwork over for a critical post,” he said. “This isn’t an ambassador to wherever, this is a global-stage role. And you don’t go around telling the world, ‘This is going to be my nominee’ and then never send anything over.”

Menendez didn’t know at that time that Nauert was about to take herself out of considerat­ion. But he warned that Democrats were going to thoroughly vet her themselves and that he was skeptical of her qualificat­ions for this senior diplomatic role.

“I question in the first instance … that she has the expertise to be United States ambassador to the United Nations,” Menendez said. “Being a spokespers­on is basically spinning what someone else tells you. Leading the world at the United Nations from a U.S. perspectiv­e is a totally different thing.”

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