• Thursday, April 25, 2024

HEADLINE STORY

‘Incredibly rich’ diaspora truly an asset to both India, US, says Biden’s top aide Neera Tanden ahead of Modi visit

Indian Americans, who constitute about 1% of the US’s population, are said to be having the highest per capita income among various ethnic groups in that country and have played a key role in strengthening ties between the two countries.

Neera Tanden (Photo by Andrew Harnik-Pool/Getty Images)

By: Shubham Ghosh

The “incredibly rich” diaspora is truly an asset to both India and the US, Neera Tandon, a top Indian American aide to president Joe Biden has said as the White House gears up to host prime minister Narendra Modi for an official state visit in June.

Indian Americans, who constitute about a per cent of the US’s population, are said to be having the highest per capita income among various ethnic groups in that country and have played a key role over the years in strengthening the relationship between the two democracies, a fact that is acknowledged at the highest level, including by Biden.

“One thing that is truly an asset to both countries is the incredibly rich diaspora here in the United States. I have been engaged with organisations that have really focused on the diaspora in the United States, and the rich connections between Indian Americans, Indians who’ve been born here, who are first generation, second generation, and their families in India. This is a major asset to the relationship,” 52-year-old Tanden, senior advisor and staff secretary to Biden, told the PTI in an exclusive interview.

Friday (26) was her last day as the senior advisor and staff secretary to the president.

From Monday (28), Tanden would take charge as the White House Domestic Policy Advisor, making her one of the most powerful Indian Americans in the White House. She replaces former national security advisor and former US ambassador to the UN, Susan Rice.

“I’m excited for the (Indian) State Visit,” Tanden said in response to a question.

Modi has been invited by Biden and first lady Jill Biden for an official state visit on June 22.

“I’m really also excited for us to highlight the deep relationships between Indian Americans and their families in India and really how we learn back and forth. That’s not just a one-way conversation. We learn a lot from them, and they learn from us. It’s a big asset to the relationship that those organisations’ voices are so strong, and they are all throughout the country, not just in the east coast or the West Coast, but really, all throughout the country,” Tanden said.

She started working in politics and policy in government in the late 1990s. She has been working in Washington at different levels for the last 25 years.

“I am just really proud of the role Indian Americans are playing. There were very few Indian Americans in the (Bill) Clinton White House. There were very few Indian Americans in the Clinton administration. A lot of families have pushed their children in other directions, sometimes in medicine, business, and other areas. But what’s really gratifying is to be in the White House and sit at the table, and see not just Asian Americans, but a lot of Indian Americans,” she said.

Tanden has served in both the (Barack) Obama and Clinton administrations, as well as presidential campaigns and think tanks.

(With PTI inputs)

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