Who is Nikki Haley? U.N. ambassador pick by Trump national healer-in-chief

Published 6:19 pm Thursday, November 24, 2016

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — Gov. Nikki Haley has developed a national reputation as a racial conciliator who led the charge to bring down the Confederate flag at the Statehouse and guided South Carolina through one of its darkest moments, the massacre at a black church.

Now the 44-year-old American-born daughter of Indian immigrants is about to take her role as the state’s healer-in-chief to a world stage, as U.N. ambassador.

On Wednesday, Haley became the first woman and first minority chosen by President-elect Donald Trump for his Cabinet.

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If the Senate confirms her, she could find herself in the awkward position of being the international voice for an administration that has belittled the United Nations, promised to build a wall along the Mexican border and endeared itself to the alt-right movement, even though Trump has repudiated such groups.

Haley may have offered a glimpse Tuesday of how she will approach the job.

“Faith with action and kindness and love will always take us where we want to go,” the Republican governor said at Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, where a white man gunned down nine black parishioners in June 2015.

Haley drew wide praise for her leadership after the attack, as she conveyed the state’s grief and successfully led calls to bring down the Confederate flag that had flown on the Statehouse grounds for 54 years. The shootings were motivated by “pure hate,” she said then, and will “forever change the way I live my life.”

On Tuesday, churches across the state honored Haley’s request for prayer vigils amid the nearly simultaneous murder trials of the defendant in the church massacre and a white former police officer accused of fatally shooting a black motorist in the back.

Her handling of the racially charged events bolstered her national image, said longtime GOP operative Richard Quinn.

“It became a national example of how you can deal with racial issues peacefully,” he said.

Other crises Haley has grappled with over the past two years include historic flooding in 2015, an elementary school shooting last September, Hurricane Matthew last month and wildfires that continue to rage in the state’s northwestern corner.

“The one constant is when things we didn’t understand happened, the action was people stood hand in hand and loved each other. They didn’t look for someone to blame, or hate. They looked for someone to love and lift people up,” she said Tuesday, in calling for the same approach as the trials and the disaster recovery play out.

Born Nimrata Nikki Randhawa in rural Bamberg, South Carolina, Haley was raised a Sikh. She says she converted to Christianity before marrying her husband, Michael, in 1996. They have two children, ages 18 and 15.

Haley has recalled that as a youngster, she and her sister were disqualified from the segregated Little Miss Bamberg Pageant because organizers couldn’t figure out whether the girls should compete in the white or the black contest.

She confronted religious slurs over her Sikh roots during her 2010 campaign.

The second-term governor, who can’t seek a third term, was a Trump critic during the White House campaign. She asked Americans to resist “the siren call of the angriest voices” in how the nation treats immigrants.

But she has also fought the Obama administration on both legal and illegal immigration. Last December, she asked that no Syrian refugees be relocated to South Carolina because of “gaps in available intelligence” on those fleeing the civil war.

Haley, the second U.S. governor of Indian heritage, is the first South Carolina governor who is not a white man. She is also the nation’s youngest governor.

She brings limited international experience to one of the U.S. government’s most important international assignments. Almost all of her exposure on the world stage has been in pursuit of luring jobs to South Carolina.

Michelin, Bridgestone, Continental, Trelleborg and Giti Tire all have announced new or expanded operations in recent years, bolstering South Carolina’s reputation as the nation’s tire capital.

Her trips abroad to lure jobs include a 2015 secretive trip to Sweden, which was followed weeks later by an announcement that Volvo would build its first U.S. auto plant in South Carolina in exchange for more than $200 million in state incentives.

In 2014, Haley took an economic development trip to India, her first visit to her parents’ native country since she was 2. Her parents emigrated from India in the early 1960s.

Haley graduated from Clemson University in 1994 with an accounting degree. But she says her business experience started at age 13, when she became the bookkeeper of her family’s clothing store, a job she returned to after college.

In 2010, she was a three-term state House member, little known across the state. Still, Haley won the GOP primary for governor that year against a South Carolina congressman, an attorney general and a lieutenant governor. She prevailed in the general election and was easily re-elected four years later.