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Regular-article-logo Saturday, 23 November 2024

White House considering Indra Nooyi to head World Bank

Nooyi's negative comments about Donald Trump could be a roadblock to her nomination

Annie Karni/NYTNS Published 16.01.19, 08:47 AM
Indra Nooyi stepped down from her role at PepsiCo last August after leading the company for 12 years.

Indra Nooyi stepped down from her role at PepsiCo last August after leading the company for 12 years. The Telegraph file picture

The White House is considering Indra K. Nooyi, the former chief executive officer of PepsiCo, for the position of World Bank president, according to several people familiar with the process.

Nooyi, who stepped down from her role at PepsiCo last August after leading the company for 12 years, has been courted as an administration ally by Ivanka Trump, the President’s eldest daughter who is playing a role in the selection of a nominee.

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The decision-making process for the top post at the World Bank is fluid and in its initial stages and early front-runners and candidates often fall off the radar, or withdraw from consideration, before the President makes his ultimate pick. Donald Trump often makes his own gut decisions about whom to choose.

It is unclear whether Nooyi would accept the nomination if chosen by the administration but Ivanka Trump, who has tweeted that she views Nooyi as a “mentor + inspiration”, has floated her name as a potential successor. Nooyi has dined with the President and other business leaders at his Bedminster, New Jersey, golf club. She drew criticism for assuming an advisory role on his business council, which was disbanded after many chief executives quit following Donald Trump’s comments blaming “many sides” for white supremacist violence in Charlottesville, Virginia, in August 2017.

Negative comments that Nooyi made after the 2016 election, during which she did not publicly endorse any candidate, are seen as a potential roadblock to her nomination. Trump’s win, she said, created a lot of questions among her daughters and her employees.

A file photo shows Indra Nooyi speaking to Donald Trump at the White House.

A file photo shows Indra Nooyi speaking to Donald Trump at the White House. The New York Times

“They were all in mourning,” Nooyi said in an interview with Andrew Ross Sorkin at The New York Times’s DealBook conference in 2016.

“Our employees are all crying. And the question that they’re asking, especially those who are not white: ‘Are we safe?’ Women are asking: ‘Are we safe?’ LGBT people are asking: ‘Are we safe?’ I never thought I’d have had to answer those questions.”

Nooyi later tried to clarify her remarks and a spokesperson for PepsiCo told Fortune magazine that “Mrs Nooyi misspoke. She was referring to the reaction of a group of employees she spoke to who were apprehensive about the outcome of the election. She never intended to imply that all employees feel the same way.”

That those past comments may hinder her chances are a reminder that Trump does not have a large circle of loyalists to choose from for top positions.

Other candidates are also being considered, including David Malpass, the undersecretary of the Treasury for International Affairs, whose loyalty to the president runs deep: he served as an economic adviser on Trump’s 2016 campaign. Another name in the mix is Ray Washburne, the president of the Overseas Private Investment Corporation. Washburne also served on Trump’s 2016 finance team, and was seen as an early candidate for a Cabinet position.

The World Bank’s current president, Jim Yong Kim, said earlier this month he would step down from his post in February to join a private infrastructure investment firm, an unexpected departure that comes nearly three years before the end of his term. Kim was first appointed by the Obama administration in 2012, on the recommendation of Hillary Clinton when she was secretary of state, and was reappointed by President Barack Obama in 2016 to serve a second five-year term.

The process of choosing a successor is being overseen by Steven Mnuchin, the Treasury secretary, Mick Mulvaney, the acting chief of staff, and Ivanka Trump, whose role in the process was announced by the White House on Monday.

Ivanka Trump’s role in the process drew some criticism from ethics watchdogs on Monday, who said that it could pose a conflict of interest for the president’s daughter to be involved in international economic matters when she has not completely divested from her assets.

But Ivanka Trump’s role is notable, because of her unique sway over her father when it comes to personnel matters. The group was expected to begin the interview process on Tuesday, in order to present Donald Trump with recommendations for a nominee.

A White House spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment about the candidates.

c.2019 New York Times News Service

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