CBS: Nikki Haley: I was asked by Cabinet members to take sides against the president
Nikki Haley, the one-time Republican governor of South Carolina and former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, is no longer in public life. But if a recent visit to a high school near her hometown is any indication, the public isn't done with her.
The 47-year-old married mother of two has a new book, "With All Due Respect" (St. Martin's Press), recounting both her tenure in the Trump administration, and her journey from small town Bamberg, S.C., to the world stage.
She told "CBS Evening News" anchor Norah O'Donnell that she dislikes being described as "ambitious."
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WNU Editor: Quoting Nikki Haley .... “Kelly and Tillerson confided in me that when they resisted the president, they weren’t being insubordinate, they were trying to save the country”. If this is true, all that I can say is that they were being insubordinate. If you disagree with an elected President who has a mandate to govern, you do not undermine him. You resign.
More News On Former UN Ambassador Nikki Haley Claims That John Kelly And Rex Tillerson Asked Her To Defy President Trump
Nikki Haley claims top aides tried to recruit her to ‘save the country’ by undermining Trump -- The Washington Post
Nikki Haley claims Kelly and Tillerson thought they were saving the country by resisting Trump -- CNBC
Nikki Haley claims John Kelly and Rex Tillerson asked her to defy Trump in order to 'save the country' from the inside -- Business Insider
Haley: Top Trump aides tried to get me to undermine him -- The Hill
Nikki Haley reveals Tillerson, Kelly privately discussed resisting Trump: ‘It was offensive’ -- FOX News
Nikki Haley says Rex Tillerson claimed people would die if Trump was unchecked -- Axios
9 comments:
"You do not undermine him, you resign"
Once you have resigned then you should be able to criticize him albeit without releasing sensitive/top secret information.
Then why do we have laws in place to protect whistle blowers?
John Kelley was perfectly happy to work with McMaster. That says a lot.
President Trump tweeted or retweeted 82 times on Saturday while flying to and from a collegiate football game in Alabama.
Why it matters: Many of the president's tweets were fighting back against the House's impeachment inquiry into allegations that he withheld congressionally approved military aid to pressure Ukraine to investigate his political opponents. The House will hold its first public impeachment hearings this week.
To protect those whistle blowers that don't want to be executed for doing their duty.
Eric CIAramella might get convicted. Executed like Vince Foster ?
... not by the Republicans.
But the Democrats might take their frustration out on him if he fails.
anon: Foster executed? your evidence!
the whistle blower will not be convicted. He is protected by a law, moron.
Whistle blowers afraid of being executed. What's the precedent for this comment?
I would be worried more about back alley stuff, car accidents etc than execution.
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