Report: Biden to Nominate Cindy McCain for Coveted UN Position
Cindy McCain, the widow of the late Sen. John McCain of Arizona, is in line for an ambassador position in the Biden administration, according to a new report.
McCain and her husband were staunch opponents of former President Donald Trump despite being Republicans. She supported President Joe Biden in the presidential election, and he ended up winning Arizona.
According to Politico, McCain will now be named U.S. ambassador to the United Nations World Food Programme. The agency is based in Rome.
McCain, 66, previously worked to fight world hunger and human trafficking as the chair of the board of trustees for the McCain Institute for International Leadership at Arizona State University.
McCain was also a member of Biden’s transition team. Earlier speculation indicated she could be named the administration’s ambassador to the United Kingdom, according to Axios.
In February she indicated she would take a role in the administration.
“Of course I would,” McCain told CBS’ Lee Cowan. “You can’t turn down when a president says to you, ‘We need you.’”
The news caused a buzz on Twitter.
lol she kissed the ring, she got the job https://t.co/3CGSCNfoK6
— kaitlin, super mega RINO (@thefactualprep) April 12, 2021
Will puppet Megan and her radical right winger husband Ben Domenech disown her?
POLITICO Playbook: Scoop: Cindy McCain set to land Biden ambassadorship https://t.co/F7jgU0Xoj1 via @politico— Yellow Rose Texas (@rosie_texas) April 12, 2021
Cindy McCain seems to be a stand up woman and I wish her the best if she gets this position. I’ll try not to judge her by how self centered and horrible Meghan is. Children shouldn’t be judged for who their parents are, and the same should go for parents. https://t.co/NzkbBsN88L
— Sarah (@sanneg7) April 12, 2021
In a January Op-Ed for Deseret News, McCain explained her support for Biden.
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“Biden has already made clear how he’ll lead: He will work for the good of the country rather than the good of himself and his own party. That’s the way he and John worked when they were both in the Senate,” she wrote.
Sen. McCain served in the Senate from 1987 until his death in 2018. Biden served in the Senate from 1972 until 2009, when he became vice president in the Obama administration.
“We were good friends with the Bidens,” Cindy McCain told CNN host Anderson Cooper.
She said her late husband would be pleased Biden defeated Trump.
“And I just know he is looking down and going, ‘You did the right thing.'”
This article appeared originally on The Western Journal.