Chattanooga Times Free Press

Haley’s pushback draws fans, rattles the White House

- BY JONATHAN LEMIRE AND MEG KINNARD

NEW YORK — The public split between the White House and U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley this week over Russia sanctions threw a spotlight on her at-times uneasy relationsh­ip with President Donald Trump, even as her deft rebuttal bolstered talk about her own future political fortunes.

Haley’s rejoinder to a putdown from a close Trump adviser about message confusion — she declared that “I don’t get confused” — was seized as a rallying cry among some women and echoed the audacity the former governor displayed while upending the old boys’ club in the South Carolina statehouse. But the episode also called into question her standing on Trump’s national security team ahead of tough decisions on North Korea, Iran and other fronts.

“What distinguis­hes her from the star-struck sycophants in the White House is that she understand­s the intersecti­on of strong leadership and public service, where great things happen,” said Rob Godfrey, a spokesman for Haley when she was governor.

Haley, now considered to be on the shortlist of future presidenti­al candidates, has consistent­ly taken a harder line than Trump on Russia. While that has, at times, drawn Trump’s ire, her hawkishnes­s on other occasions has been appreciate­d by the president, who has allowed her to reprimand Moscow while he works toward a friendship with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

That dynamic broke down this week. Trump was angry Sunday when he saw Haley on television discussing new Russia sanctions she said would be announced the next day. He blasted her for being out of step with the rest of the administra­tion, according to two White House officials. They were not authorized to discuss private conversati­ons and commented only on condition of anonymity.

Despite Haley’s words, no new sanctions were imposed.

Asked for an explanatio­n, Larry Kudlow, the president’s new economic adviser, told reporters that Haley “got ahead of the curve” and he added, “She’s a very effective ambassador, but there might have been some momentary confusion about that.”

The next day, Haley hit back, releasing a statement to Fox News that read: “With all due respect, I don’t get confused.”

Kudlow apologized, but Haley’s difference­s with the White House already had pushed into the open.

At the United Nations, responding to a shouted question about her relationsh­ip with the president, she simply said, “It’s perfect.” But the White House was left scrambling to explain.

Haley’s allies insist she always consults with the West Wing, and sometimes the president personally, before speaking publicly. White House officials said the plan about the sanctions changed after she was briefed and she wasn’t told before she went on television. Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin further muddled the narrative Thursday when he told Fox Business Channel that the administra­tion “refined the strategy after Nikki made that announceme­nt.”

He said, “She wasn’t left twisting in the wind, this was a fluid situation, the decision changed.”

Haley’s pushback struck a chord, becoming something of an instant feminist motto in the way it rebelled against what some saw as a patronizin­g comment from a powerful man. The words carried additional resonance considerin­g Haley’s place as one of the few prominent women in Trump’s inner circle. Her comment was compared in some quarters to the way Sen. Elizabeth Warren had appropriat­ed “Neverthele­ss, she persisted” as a rallying cry after the remark was delivered by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell after he tried to silence Warren on the Senate floor last year.

 ?? JOHAN NILSSON/TT NEWS AGENCY VIA AP ?? Nikki Haley, center, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, visits The European Spallation Source in Lund, Sweden, on Friday. The event is an annual informal working meeting with the U.N. Secretary-General and the Security Council.
JOHAN NILSSON/TT NEWS AGENCY VIA AP Nikki Haley, center, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, visits The European Spallation Source in Lund, Sweden, on Friday. The event is an annual informal working meeting with the U.N. Secretary-General and the Security Council.

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