Rep. Elise Stefanik is prone to face questions at her affirmation listening to Tuesday to turn into the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations about her lack of overseas coverage expertise, her robust help for Israel and her views on funding the U.N. and its many businesses.
Harvard-educated and the fourth-ranking member of the U.S. Home, she was elected to Congress in 2015 as a average Republican and is leaving a decade later as certainly one of President Trump’s most ardent allies.
When she seems earlier than the Senate Overseas Relations Committee, Stefanik is prone to be grilled about her views on the wars in Gaza, Ukraine, Sudan and elsewhere in addition to the North Korean and Iranian nuclear packages — all points on the U.N. agenda.