RUTHIE BLUM; A PROMISING US PICK FOR UN AMBASSADOR

http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=17733

If confirmed by the United States Senate, South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley will become the next ‎American ambassador to the United Nations, replacing Samantha Power in that role.‎

Because the U.N. has become worse than a bad joke — giving despotic regimes a say and vote on ‎issues the international body was established to tackle — its U.S. representative has the particularly ‎tricky and important job of leading the West in setting the right moral tone

It is thus not a diplomatic position in the conventional sense. On the contrary, the best U.S. ‎ambassadors have those who make repeated and concerted efforts to put their ill-deserving ‎counterparts in their place, not only through votes and vetoes, but rhetorically, from the podium.‎

Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Jeane Kirkpatrick and John Bolton are prime examples of shining beacons in ‎the Midtown Manhattan snake pit. Whether Haley lives up to that standard is anyone’s guess. But ‎there is reason to hope that she might, in spite of what critics are pointing to as her lack of experience ‎in matters of foreign affairs.‎

It is clear from Haley’s record, and meteoric rise to her position as the youngest serving governor in ‎the U.S. at the moment, that she possesses the kind of clarity on controversial issues that is required ‎in an arena filled with people whose key purpose is to cloud the distinction between good and evil. ‎

She is a fierce opponent of raising taxes, including — get this — on cigarettes. ‎

She supports school choice and monetary incentives for teachers, to foster excellence.‎

She led the campaign to have the Confederate flag removed from the grounds of her state’s Capitol.‎

She is a right-to-life proponent, voting on two separate bills that would require pregnant women to ‎see their ultrasounds and wait 24 hours before being permitted to have abortions.‎

She opposed a bill in her state Senate that would require transgender people to use bathrooms ‎based on their biological, rather than self-identified sex, viewing the whole thing as a nonissue that ‎should be left alone by politicians.‎

She signed a law to crack down on illegal immigration, and supports legislation that would require ‎voters to produce photo ID at the polls. As the daughter of Indian immigrants who went through ‎legal channels to become American citizens, she is unapologetic about this stance.‎

She also introduced legislation that would outlaw BDS. Though the bill did not mention Israel, its ‎definition of “boycott” — “to blacklist, divest from, or otherwise refuse to deal with a person or firm ‎when the action is based on race, color, religion, gender, or national origin of the targeted person ‎or entity” — implies that behavior toward the Jewish state provided part of the impetus for it.‎

This is why Israeli Ambassador to the U.N. Danny Danon hailed Haley’s appointment, while ‎Permanent Observer of Palestine to the United Nations Riyad Mansour snorted at it. ‎

Finally — ironically — one equally good sign is that Haley initially supported Sen. Marco Rubio in the ‎Republican primaries and then Sen. Ted Cruz. When Donald Trump became her party’s nominee, she ‎announced she would vote for him, despite her reservations about his character and abilities. She ‎then called on him to release his tax returns, a move that elicited one of Trump’s notorious Twitter ‎offensives.‎

The above bodes well for two reasons. One is that Haley was not angling to be in the inner circle of the ‎incoming administration. The other is that the president-elect was able to let bygones be bygones and ‎select her for a top spot, based on merit.‎

When he announced that she was his pick for U.N. ambassador, Trump described Haley as a “deal-‎maker” — someone with the ability to “cross the aisle.” Though this is the billionaire businessman’s ‎version of high praise, it is actually not the quality most desirable in a post that demands denouncing ‎and even shunning those whose resolutions are shameful and run counter to American values and ‎superiority.‎

If she is able to translate his words into the kind of action that gives other member states good reason ‎to follow her direction, however, she will do the office proud.‎

Ruthie Blum is the managing editor of The Algemeiner.

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