Imperial Valley Press

UN migration agency snubs President Trump’s nominee to lead it

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GENEVA (AP) — The U.N.’s migration agency snubbed the Trump administra­tion’s candidate to lead it on Friday, a major blow to U.S. leadership of a body addressing one of the world’s most pressing issues — and only the second time that it won’t be run by an American since 1951.

Portuguese Socialist and former European Union commission­er Antonio Vitorino won a race to be the next director-general of the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration, edging out both a top IOM official and U.S. candidate Ken Isaacs, the body said in a statement.

Vitorino, 61, will become the group’s second director-general not from the U.S. since the intergover­nmental organizati­on was founded. He is a former EU commission­er for Home and Justice Affairs who has been President of the “Notre Europe” think tank for the last seven years, and is considered very close to U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, also a Portuguese Socialist early in his political career. Isaacs was eliminated in early rounds of voting, and Vitorino won by acclamatio­n over runner-up Laura Thompson of Costa Rica, currently an IOM deputy director-general who was vying to become the agency’s first woman chief.

The move marks a searing rejection of the U.S. candidate just as the Trump administra­tion has been retreating from or rebuffing internatio­nal institutio­ns — including two others based in Geneva: Earlier this month, the United States pulled out of the U.N.’s Human Rights Council, and Trump has recently criticized the World Trade Organizati­on as “unfair” to the U.S.

“Yet another sign that US power, authority and prestige has been so dramatical­ly diminished,” tweeted Keith Harper, who was the Obama administra­tion’s ambassador to the rights council. The “IOM Director is seen as an ‘American seat’ and Trump was unable to place an American in it.”

The U.S. State Department congratula­ted Vitorino, calling the vote “a very competitiv­e election with three highly qualified candidates.”

“IOM is an important partner for the United States around the globe, and we are committed to working with IOM to address root causes of migration and to promote safe and legal migration,” it said in a statement.

Isaacs’ candidacy had been clouded by U.S. policies like travel bans and migrant family separation­s — and his own comments that critics have called anti-Muslim. But few diplomats streaming out of a Geneva conference center dared to offer an explanatio­n about how an American was stripped of a post that the U.S. has held a lock-hold on for decades. One, Senegalese diplomat Youssoupha Ndiaye, simply spoke of the early result: “The American is out.”

Vitorino, who was selected by the dues-paying, ballot-casting members among the 172 countries in the IOM, will succeed longtime U.S. diplomat William Lacy Swing, who leaves in September. An intergover­nmental body that became a U.N.-related agency in 2016, IOM has had only one director-general who wasn’t American since its creation 67 years ago. But Mark Hetfield, a self-described friend of Isaacs who heads the humanitari­an group HIAS, which works with IOM, put the blame on policies and invective from the man in the White House — not the candidate for the U.N. migration agency job.

“This IOM election really was not about Ken Isaacs, for whom I have a lot of respect as a humanitari­an,” Hetfield said. “The election was an internatio­nal referendum rejecting President Trump and his xenophobic, Islamophob­ic and isolationi­st policies.”

“Let’s face it, Isaacs’ tweets were no worse than the ones coming out of the White House,” he added.

The administra­tion is fresh off major internatio­nal scorn over the separation of migrant families coming across the Mexico border. The U.S. Supreme Court has also upheld his ban on U.S. travel for citizens of a number of countries, most of them predominan­tly Muslim.

Trump has also yanked the United States out of the Global Compact for Migration — a fact that several diplomats, who requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak on the record about the balloting, cited as a worrying sign about U.S. policies on an issue that has vast implicatio­ns around the world.

Isaacs himself had been on the defensive over retweets and other social media comments that some critics viewed as anti-Muslim, so much so that he shut down his Twitter account.

 ?? MARTIAL TREZZINI/KEYSTONE ?? Ken Isaacs of the US gives a speech after being eliminated from the election ballot for the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration (IOM), in Geneva, Switzerlan­d, on Friday.
MARTIAL TREZZINI/KEYSTONE Ken Isaacs of the US gives a speech after being eliminated from the election ballot for the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration (IOM), in Geneva, Switzerlan­d, on Friday.

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