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US names Kennedy scion to N.Ireland role
President Joe Biden's administration on Monday named Joe Kennedy III, a scion of the Irish American political dynasty, as an envoy on Northern Ireland.
Kennedy was given a title of special envoy to Northern Ireland for economic affairs with a focus on promoting investment and development.
The United States previously had a broader position of special envoy for Northern Ireland that started with former senator George Mitchell, who negotiated the landmark 1998 Good Friday agreement that largely ended decades of violence in the British-administered region.
Kennedy will look to promote development "to the benefit of all communities" in Northern Ireland, historically divided between Protestants and Catholics, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said.
"His role builds on the long-standing US commitment to supporting peace, prosperity and stability in Northern Ireland and the peace dividends of the Belfast/Good Friday Agreement," Blinken said in a statement.
Blinken said that other US diplomats will work on political efforts on Northern Ireland, where tensions have grown since Britain left the European Union, effectively restoring a border with EU member Ireland.
Kennedy, the grandson of late senator Ted Kennedy, served in the House of Representatives until unsuccessfully seeking the Democratic nomination for a Senate seat in 2020.
His great-uncle John F. Kennedy was the first Catholic president and a hero of Biden, the second Catholic president, who often speaks fondly of his own Irish heritage.
The Kennedys remain active in Democratic politics with the late president's daughter Caroline Kennedy serving under Biden as ambassador to Australia.
The new envoy's great-grandfather, Joseph Kennedy, was ambassador to London at the start of World War II when he faced wide accusations of anti-British sentiment.
T.Sanchez--AT