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State Department spokesperson Heather Nauert may be the next UN ambassador

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Trump told reporters Thursday that she’s “under serious consideration.”
State Department spokesperson Heather Nauert is reportedly the leading candidate to become the next US ambassador to the United Nations.
President Donald Trump, at a press conference on Thursday, confirmed Nauert is a contender for the job. “She’s under serious consideration,” Trump told reporters. “She’s excellent, been with us for a long time, been a supporter for a long time.”
Trump added that a lot of “great people” want the position, but he’ll likely make the decision next week. A source also told Vox that Trump interviewed Nauert for the role.
UN Ambassador Nikki Haley announced earlier this month that she’s planning to step down by the end of the year. During her two years in office, Haley toggled between Trump’s “America First” approach and a more traditional Republican approach to foreign policy.
She emerged from the role mostly unscathed, and raised her national profile in the process.
Nauert, a former Fox News host, joined the State Department as its top spokesperson in April 2017. She’s largely been an effective messenger for the agency, and her clout at Foggy Bottom has grown, particularly since the exit of former Secretary of State Rex Tillerson.
From March until October of this year, Nauert also served as the acting Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs, a high-ranking post at State.
As Haley’s likely successor, Nauert would inherit the tricky role of advocating for an “America First” worldview in a multilateral organization. Her success would likely depend on how well she deals with foreign policy heavyweights in the Trump administration, specifically National Security Adviser John Bolton and Pompeo — and how she handles the ever-unfolding crises around the globe, from North Korea to Syria.
Nauert joined the State Department after working for 15 years as a correspondent and on-air-host. She was at Fox News for much of that time, and even worked on Trump’s favorite program, Fox & Friends.
Nauert had the backing of the White House when she arrived at State, but she reportedly failed to win over then-Secretary of State Rex Tillerson.
Her tenure as spokesperson got off to a somewhat rocky start: There was an early press conference where she had to rely on a huge binder to answer questions, and a tweet in October 2017 in which she seemed to forget that North Korea had nuclear capabilities.
Nauert has since settled in, and though journalists have griped that the State Department doesn’t give press briefings as frequently as it did under past administrations, Nauert’s interactions with reporters are far less confrontational than the press shop at the White House. Nauert, in fact, had often been named as a possible future White House press secretary to take over for Sarah Sanders, if and when she departed the administration.
Nauert’s status within the administration was elevated in March when Trump shook up the leadership at the agency and replaced Tillerson with then-CIA Director Mike Pompeo. Politico reported in August that Pompeo trusted Nauert, and had included her as a key member of his team.
Nauert also quietly served as the No. 4 official at the State Department when she took over as acting Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs in March. (Her tenure expired in mid-October.) During that time, she continued her day-to-day job as spokesperson.
Now Nauert may soon be serving as America’s top diplomat at the United Nations. Nauert spent almost two years at State as the public face of the State Department, crafting the message on global challenges from North Korea to Iran, but now she’s tasked with shaping foreign policy.
Her lack of deep foreign policy credentials is a source of concern, though Haley, her predecessor, also came to the job with scant international experience.
“She has no qualifications for such a post,” a person familiar with discussions told Vox.
Haley’s tenure as UN ambassador was something of a paradox. She stood up to Russia, especially on its role in the ongoing conflict in Syria, and advocated for human rights, even as she helped Trump wage war with the UN. Haley defended the US’s withdrawal from organizations like the UN Human Rights Council and threatened to “take names” of those UN members who objected to Trump’s recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.
Whether Nauert would try to follow Haley’s example or take a different path is still unclear. Haley had also demanded that the US Ambassador to the UN role be a Cabinet-level position, but there’s no guarantee that it would remain so when and if Nauert takes over.
Nauert may be moving to New York, but she won’t be far removed from the Washington infighting in the Trump administration, because the presence of National Security Adviser and former UN Ambassador John Bolton still looms large. Bolton’s hawkishness, especially on Iran (and now, apparently Latin America), will extend to the UN. It’s an open question whether Nauert would be able to push back and stake out her own policies, or spend her tenure being railroaded by Trump’s national security team.
“Anyone who’s coming up to New York should assume they’re fighting a lot of trench warfare,” said Richard Gowan, senior fellow at the United Nations University, told me earlier this month, speaking about the foreign-policy conflicts within the administration.
Another big question is how effective Nauert would be at managing Trump’s expectations of the United Nations, particularly when it comes to his General Assembly appearances each year. The president may not love what the UN represents — in fact, he’s often railed against the international body — but he seems to appreciate the spectacle of it all, and that keeps him involved. Haley largely succeeded at this. It remains to be seen if Nauert can do the same.
Alex Ward contributed reporting to this article.

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