Trump chooses New York Rep. Elise Stefanik as ambassador to the United
Nations
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[November 12, 2024]
By JILL COLVIN, EDITH M. LEDERER and FARNOUSH AMIRI
NEW YORK (AP) — President-elect Donald Trump has chosen Rep. Elise
Stefanik to serve as his ambassador to the United Nations, picking a
loyal ally with little foreign policy experience to represent the U.S.
at the international organization.
“Elise is an incredibly strong, tough, and smart America First fighter,”
Trump said in a statement Monday announcing his pick for the role — his
first selection that will require Senate confirmation.
Stefanik, 40, who serves as House Republican Conference Chair, has long
been one of Trump's most loyal allies in the House, and was among those
discussed as a potential vice presidential choice.
She will be thrown into the world body’s deep divisions from the wars in
the Mideast and Ukraine to reining in nuclear programs in North Korea
and Iran.
She will also come face-to-face almost daily in the U.N. Security
Council with the ambassadors of Russia and China whose countries are now
strongly allied and looking warily at a second Trump presidency – and
sometimes with their counterparts from North Korea and Iran.
Stefanik will succeed U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield, a career
diplomat and former assistant secretary of state for Africa who has held
the job through the entire Biden administration and has been a member of
his Cabinet. Stefanik also will be a member of Trump's Cabinet, he said
in the statement.
In Trump’s first administration, he chose former South Carolina governor
Nikki Haley, who had little foreign experience except for some trade
missions, for the U.N. post. She resigned after two years and then
challenged Trump for the GOP nomination. Haley was succeeded by then
U.S. ambassador to Canada Kelly Craft, wife of a Kentucky coal magnate,
who in 2023 was unsuccessful in her bid for the GOP nomination for
governor of the state.
John Bolton, a former U.S. national security adviser under Trump and
ambassador to the U.N. during the Bush administration, told The
Associated Press that he sees Stefanik as the 2024 version of Haley.
“She wants to run for president in 2028. She realizes she has no foreign
policy experience so what better way than to become U.N. ambassador,”
Bolton said. “She stays two years, and then away we go.”
Born and raised in upstate New York, Stefanik graduated from Harvard and
worked in former President George W. Bush’s White House on the domestic
policy council and in the chief of staff’s office.
In 2014, at 30, she became the youngest woman ever elected to Congress,
representing upstate New York. She later became the youngest woman to
serve in House leadership.
Stefanik was known early in her tenure as a more moderate conservative
voice. But she soon attached herself to the former president, quietly
remaking her image into that of a staunch MAGA ally — and seeing her
power ascend.
She became the House Republican Conference Chair in 2021.
Stefanik spent years positioning herself as one of Trump’s most trusted
allies and confidants on the Hill. She endorsed him in the 2024 race
before he had even launched his bid, and aggressively campaigned on his
behalf during the GOP primary.
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Republican Conference Chair Rep. Elise Stefanik, R-N.Y., waves to
supporters at CPAC in Oxon Hill, Md., Feb. 23, 2024. President-elect
Donald Trump has chosen Rep. Elise Stefanik to serve as his
ambassador to the United Nations. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana, File)
She saw her profile rise after her aggressive questioning of a trio of
university presidents over antisemitism on their campuses led to two of
their resignations — a performance Trump repeatedly praised.
She also defended him vigorously in both of his impeachment trials and
railed against his four criminal indictments, including filing an ethics
complaint in New York against the judge who heard his civil fraud case.
While she is a member of the House Armed Services Committee and serves
on the coveted House committee that oversees national intelligence, her
pick further solidifies Trump’s preference for unconditional loyalty in
his second administration over career experience.
One area of foreign policy that Stefanik has been vocal about is Israel.
Since the start of the Israel-Hamas war, Stefanik has focused much of
her attention on the United Nations, accusing the world body and
international organizations of antisemitism for their criticism of
Israel’s bombardment of Gaza, which has resulted in the death of more
than 43,000 Palestinians, according to their Health Ministry.
She has gone as far as calling last month for a “complete reassessment”
of U.S. funding for the United Nations, while helping push for the
blocking of American support for the U.N. agency that provides
humanitarian aid to Palestinians in the region.
Her departure for the United Nations would also mean that Republicans,
who are on track to have a razor-thin majority in the House, would be
down one crucial vote. But Stefanik’s district is located in a deeply
red part of upstate New York, where Republicans are likely guaranteed to
win the special election that would take place after she leaves office.
“Republicans will hold this safe Republican seat as part of a Republican
majority in the House that will help deliver on President Trump’s
historic mandate,” Ed Cox, the chair of the New York Republican party,
said in a statement Monday.
Trump did not say much about the U.N. during his campaign, but has
generally advocated for a less interventionist foreign policy. He also
has repeatedly questioned the utility of international alliances,
including NATO, and he has threatened allies with higher tariffs and
said he will not protect them unless they contribute more to their own
defense.
Trump also has talked about how he initially wanted to select his eldest
daughter, Ivanka Trump, for the role after he was elected the first
time.
“'You would be a great ambassador to the United Nations, United Nations
secretary.' There’d be nobody to compete with her, I tell you,” he said
at a Moms for Liberty Summit in August. “She may be my daughter, but
nobody could have competed with her."
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Amiri reported from Washington.
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