Ethics accuser is a racist, sexist bigot: Nikki Haley
Top Stories
- Trouble mounts for Sreesanth as Mumbai cops gather more evidence
- SIT to seek Supreme Court guidance on Maya Kodnani death penalty issue
- Tamil Nadu police bans Yasin Malik-linked pro-Eelam public meeting
- Kings XI Punjab end IPL 2013 campaign with a win
- Narendra Modi: India losing sheen as agricultural nation

In a surprise testimony, South Carolina's Indian-American governor Nikki Haley has hit out at a fellow Republican, who has accused her of ethics violations, calling him a "a racist, sexist bigot".
Haley, 40, told the six-member House Ethics Committee that Republican activist John Rainey "has tried everything in his power to hurt me and my family."
Haley's outburst yesterday came after an executive testified that a Columbia engineering firm paid then-state Representative Haley, a Lexington County Republican, USD 48,000 over almost two years as a "passive" consultant to scout out new business, but Haley turned up no new work.
"In her surprise testimony, Haley repeated a story she has told before in her memoir and to the media that her accuser, Camden businessman and attorney Rainey, is a bigot," the thestate.com reported.
Haley said in her only meeting with him, while she was running for governor, Rainey was "demanding" and "demeaning", and she told her staff she did not want any campaign contributions from him.
"Mr. Rainey is a racist, sexist bigot who has tried everything in his power to hurt me and my family," Haley said.
"He came in and was demeaning and he was demanding and basically said that he wanted me to prove certain things so that if I took the oath, they wouldn't find out later that my family was related to terrorists."
"I'm still very offended by that," she said.
Haley said she did not pressure lobbyists or their clients to give money to the Lexington Medical Center Foundation, where she was a USD 110,000-a-year fundraiser.
Haley said she also did not lobby on behalf of Lexington Medical as it fought to get state approval for a heart-surgery center, or for the Columbia-based Wilbur Smith Associates engineering firm, where she was paid USD 48,000 to win new work.
... contd.
Editors’ Pick
- Destitute, orphan students outclass rest in Andhra Class 10 exams
- To re-energise ties, PM wants to visit US, waits for confirmation
- NIA court says no terror link, frees 'Hizbul militant' Liyaqat on bail
- CBI arrests its coal allotments investigator on bribery charge
- ‘Cricketer-bookie Amit may have used Jiju to reach Sree’
- BCCI chief N Srinivasan says police must prove spot-fixing allegations
- As it all sinks in, Sreesanth breaks down in tears, 'accepts mistake'


Indian wonderkid is century's youngest UC Berkeley topper
Congressman Ami Bera joins American Sikh Congressional Caucus
Indian-origin student jailed for cheating retailers in Singapore
Canada: 5 members of Indian origin family killed in high-speed car crash




















