Newsmaker

    Obama nominates Locke to be ambassador to China

    (Agencies)
    Updated: 2011-03-10 08:42
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    Obama nominates Locke to be ambassador to China

    US President Barack Obama (C) announces that Commerce Secretary Gary Locke (R) will become the new US Ambassador to China as Secretary of State Hillary Clinton looks on in the Diplomatic Room at the White House in Washington March 9, 2011. Locke will replace Jon Huntsman who will step down on April 30. [Photo/Agencies] 

    WASHINGTON?-?US President Barack Obama on Wednesday nominated as his top envoy to Beijing Commerce Secretary Gary Locke, the first Chinese-American to serve in that diplomatically and commercially important assignment.

    "When he's in Beijing, I know that American companies will be able to count on him to represent their interests in front of China's top leaders," Obama said as he announced Locke's nomination.

    Underscoring the critical nature of the relationship between the US and China, Obama was flanked by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton at the ceremony in the White House Diplomatic Room.

    Obama nominates Locke to be ambassador to China

    Locke drew on his compelling family history in accepting the nomination. His grandfather first came to America to work as a houseboy in a Washington home in exchange for English lessons. His father, who also was born in China and moved to the US as a teenager, died in January.

    "I know that if he were still alive, it would be one of his proudest moments to see his son named as the United States ambassador to his ancestral homeland," said Locke, as his wife and three young children looked on.

    "As Commerce Secretary, I've helped open up foreign markets for American businesses so they can create more jobs right here in America," he said during the White House announcement.

    "I'm eager to continue that work in China and to help you, Mr. President, manage one of America's most critical and complex diplomatic, economic, and strategic relationships."

    His appointment will require approval by the US Senate, which is likely to use the confirmation process to drill Locke about the Obama administration's policies toward China.

    Locke was unanimously confirmed by the Senate as secretary of commerce, and the White House said it expected a successful confirmation process for his new post. Locke, who would be the first Chinese-American ambassador to Beijing, does not speak Mandarin.

    If confirmed by the Senate, Locke would replace Ambassador Jon Huntsman, who leaves China in April. Huntsman, the former Republican governor of Utah, has overtly signaled his intention to run against Obama in the 2012 election, a move that has irritated many in the White House.

    The president lauded Huntsman as an "outstanding advocate for this administration"?- praise the White House knows full well could hurt Huntsman with Republican primary voters.

    Locke, a soft-spoken 61-year-old, is popular in China, say those who have traveled with him to China. During his more than 20 trips to China over the past 20 years, Locke has built a relationship with many government officials?and China's business community.

    The US-China relationship stretches well beyond economics. The US needs Chinese support on a range of foreign policy matters, from nuclear standoffs with Iran to peacekeeping efforts in Sudan.

    The White House said there was no timetable for replacing Locke, who is the first member of Obama's cabinet to leave the administration.

    US Trade Representative Ron Kirk, outgoing Google Inc Chief Executive Eric Schmidt, Symantec Corp. chairman John Thompson, former Pfizer Inc. Chief Executive Officer Jeffrey Kindler, and Julius Genachowski, the chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, are reportedly being considered.

    Kirk declined to comment about a possible move.

    Obama nominates Locke to be ambassador to China

    US President Barack Obama (R) walks with newly named US Ambassador to China Gary Locke (2nd L), Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (L), and National Security Advisor Tom Donilon as they leave the Diplomatic Room at the White House in Washington March 9, 2011. [Photo/Agencies]

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