Making
her maiden speech at the Republican National Convention, Nikki Haley ripped
into the Democratic party’s idea of America and defended Trump.
During
the principal night of the Republican National Convention (RNC),
previous US Ambassador to the UN and breakout Indian-American government
official Nikki Haley asked residents to reappoint
President Donald Trump for four additional years in the
November elections and attacked the Democratic Party for making it fashionable
to consider America a “racist” nation.
Haley
says the US is not a racist nation:
Haley’s speech on Monday night comes seven days after California Senator Kamala Harris became the first Black and Indian-American lady to be picked for a significant party’s presidential ticket. Harris is the Democratic candidate for Vice President in the 2020 US political race. In her speech, Haley, the former South Carolina Governor, said that American is not a racist country and blamed the Democratic party for creating this image of the great nation. She described how states like her local South Carolina have ascended from supremacist savagery, saying: “America is certifiably not a racist nation”.
Haley
rebuts the idea that Donald Trump is racist:
Haley
rebutted the idea that Trump is racist and said,” America is not a racist
nation. This is close to home for me. I am the proud daughter of Indian
migrants. My parents never yielded to the complaint and despise. My dad wore a
turban. I was a brown colored young lady in a white world,” looking to
mesh an energetic movement topic into the Trump re-appointment pitch.
Haley
launches a scathing attack on Joe Biden:
Addressing
the Americans in the country, she likewise attacked Democratic presidential
applicant Joe Biden’s crusade plans, portraying in detail what she called a
“radical left” future fuelled by “anarchy”,
“riots” and “drop culture”. Trump designated her as the
Permanent Representative to the UN, and she was the first Indian-American to
serve in the US cabinet. A star of the Republican Party, she left the post
toward the finish of 2018 and has been active in governmental issues.