U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley is leaving the administration at the end of the year, she and President Donald Trump announced Tuesday. She gave no reason for her departure after two years, though there has been speculation she will return to government or politics at some point.
"No, I'm not running in 2020'' for president, she joked. She said she would be supporting Trump.
Haley said she and Trump together had "solved a lot of problems. They spoke in the Oval Office, shortly after word came of her plans to resign.
Trump called Haley a "very special'' person, adding that she told him six months ago that she might want to take some time off.
It's the latest shake-up in the turbulent Trump administration just weeks before the November midterm elections. Haley's resignation was a closely guarded secret. Congressional Republicans involved in foreign policy matters and some key U.S. allies did not get advance word from Haley or the White House.
Haley, who is speculated to hold aspirations for higher office, said at the White House: "No I'm not running in 2020.''
Haley, 46, was appointed to the U.N. post in November 2016 and last month co-ordinated Trump's second trip to the United Nations, including his first time chairing the Security Council.
A rookie to international politics, the former South Carolina governor was an unusual pick for to be U.N. envoy.
"It was a blessing to go into the U.N. every day with body armour,'' Haley said, saying her job was to defend America on the world stage.
At the U.N., Haley helped spearhead the Trump administration's efforts to combat what it alleged to be anti-American and anti-Israel actions by the international body.
Trump said he was considering many candidates for Haley's job and that a successor would be named in two to three weeks.
Last month Haley wrote an op-ed article in The Washington Post discussing her policy disagreements but also her pride in working for Trump. It came in response to an anonymous essay in The New York Times by a senior administration official that alleged there to be a secret "resistance'' effort from the right in Trump's administration and that there were internal discussions of invoking the 25th amendment to remove him from office.
"I proudly serve in this administration, and I enthusiastically support most of its decisions and the direction it is taking the country,'' Haley wrote. "But I don't agree with the president on everything.''
The daughter of Indian immigrants, Haley clashed with then-candidate Trump during the 2016 campaign, denouncing "the siren call of the angriest voices'' who disrespected America's immigrants. Trump tweeted that "the people of South Carolina are embarrassed by Nikki Haley.''
"Before she was named by Trump to her U.N. post, Haley was elected the first female governor of South Carolina. She was re-elected in 2014.
South Carolina Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham, a close Trump ally tweeted that Haley "has a very bright future and will be a key player in both the future of the Republican Party and our nation as a whole for years to come.''
As governor, she developed a national reputation as a racial conciliator who led the charge to bring down the Confederate flag at the Statehouse and helped guide the state through one of its darkest moments, the massacre at a black church.
• Oct. 9: Trump announces U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley's resignation, effective at end of the year.
• Aug. 29: Trump announces that White House Counsel Don McGahn would leave sometime in the fall.
• July 5: Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt
• June 5: Communications aide Kelly Sadler
• April 12: Deputy national security adviser Ricky Waddell
• April 11: Deputy national security adviser Nadia Schadlow
• April 10: Homeland security adviser Tom Bossert
• March 28: Veterans Affairs Secretary David Shulkin
• March 22: National security adviser H.R. McMaster
• March 13: Secretary of State Rex Tillerson
• March 12: Special assistant and personal aide to the president John McEntee
• March 6: Economic adviser Gary Cohn
• Feb. 28: Communications director Hope Hicks
• Feb. 7: Staff secretary Rob Porter
• Dec. 13, 2017: Communications director for the White House Office of Public Liaison Omarosa Manigault Newman
• Dec. 8, 2017: Deputy national security adviser Dina Powell
• Sept. 29, 2017: Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price
• Aug. 25, 2017: National security aide Sebastian Gorka
• Aug. 18, 2017: Chief strategist Steve Bannon
• July 31, 2017: Communications director Anthony Scaramucci
• July 28, 2017: Chief of staff Reince Priebus
• July 21, 2017: Press secretary Sean Spicer
• May 30, 2017: Communications director Michael Dubke
• May 9, 2017: FBI Director James Comey
• March 30, 2017: Deputy chief of staff Katie Walsh
• Feb. 13, 2017: National security adviser Michael Flynn