United States President-elect Donald Trump on Monday chose Ben Carson, the mild-mannered retired neurosurgeon who challenged him for the Republican nomination, to turn around troubled US inner cities as secretary of housing and urban development.
Carson, an African American who is a religious conservative, has no background in housing policy but has cited his poor childhood in Detroit as a qualification for the job.He is the first black selected by Trump for his team.
Carson briefly led the Republican presidential pack during the primaries, offering voters an unruffled, slow-talking persona that contrasted sharply with high-decibel slugfest around him.
His bid, which initially gained support among Christian conservatives, ultimately fizzled as he stumbled presenting concrete policies and answering questions about key issues.
The Seventh Day Adventist had presented himself as an alternative to the bombastic Trump, preaching tolerance and compromise but sometimes unleashing blunt rhetoric.
These included many references to Nazi Germany, such as his suggestion that Jews would have fared better in the Holocaust had they been armed.
Trump mercilessly mocked him on the campaign trail, accusing Carson of having a “pathological” temper.
Carson nevertheless endorsed the real estate billionaire after withdrawing from the race in March, describing his former rival as “a very intelligent man who cares deeply about America.”
He took Trump on a neighborhood tour of his Detroit hometown in September at a time when the nominee was looking to boost his image with African-American voters.
And he came to Trump’s defense following the release of a 2005 audiotape in which he bragged about groping women.
United States President-elect Donald Trump on Monday chose Ben Carson, the mild-mannered retired neurosurgeon who challenged him for the Republican nomination, to turn around troubled US inner cities as secretary of housing and urban development.
Carson, an African American who is a religious conservative, has no background in housing policy but has cited his poor childhood in Detroit as a qualification for the job.
He is the first black selected by Trump for his team.
Carson briefly led the Republican presidential pack during the primaries, offering voters an unruffled, slow-talking persona that contrasted sharply with high-decibel slugfest around him.
His bid, which initially gained support among Christian conservatives, ultimately fizzled as he stumbled presenting concrete policies and answering questions about key issues.
The Seventh Day Adventist had presented himself as an alternative to the bombastic Trump, preaching tolerance and compromise but sometimes unleashing blunt rhetoric.
These included many references to Nazi Germany, such as his suggestion that Jews would have fared better in the Holocaust had they been armed.
Trump mercilessly mocked him on the campaign trail, accusing Carson of having a “pathological” temper.
Carson nevertheless endorsed the real estate billionaire after withdrawing from the race in March, describing his former rival as “a very intelligent man who cares deeply about America.”
He took Trump on a neighborhood tour of his Detroit hometown in September at a time when the nominee was looking to boost his image with African-American voters.
And he came to Trump’s defense following the release of a 2005 audiotape in which he bragged about groping women.
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