Washington, June 10, 2004
                Indo-Asian News Service 
              NRI Nikki Randhawa-Haley, who came within a 100 votes of wining the 
                Republican primaries for the South Carolina assembly, is ready for a 
                one-on-one with incumbent Larry Koon in the runoff June 22.
              "I am absolutely thrilled with the close call. My opponent is 
                the highest ranked member in the State House and has been there 30 years," 
                Haley told IANS.
              Running from the 87th District, Haley, 32, was pitted against Koon, 
                who had earlier indicated he might not run again, making Randhawa clinch 
                her decision to enter politics.
              Considered one of Lexington County's most competitive State House races, 
                the three-way split was a result of another novice candidate, David 
                Perry, an insurance agent and former state trooper taking some of the 
                vote in the race to displace the longest serving member of the State 
                House, Koon.
              The 87th District stretches from the south shore of Lake Murray through 
                the west side of the town of Lexington and Red Bank and along I-20 to 
                Gilbert.
              "It was as close as any race could be," said Haley.
              With 100 per cent of the votes counted for the 18 precincts, Koon received 
                42 percent of the vote (2,354), Haley 40 percent (2,247), and Perry 
                17 percent (968). Randhawa-Haley is 107 votes behind Koon.
              A resident of Lexington, she was born and brought up in the state, 
                despite which she said, she faced negative stereotyping as a South Asian 
                and for the fact that she followed the Sikh religion.
              During her campaign, she said she had people questioning "what 
                religion is she? Is she Muslim? Is she part of that group with Osama 
                bin laden?"
              "We knew it was such an uphill battle, but I worked so hard," 
                she said.
              In an earlier interview with NIT, she said: "Everyone that knows 
                me knows that I like to do things 150 percent. Most of all I want to 
                make a difference. My only option is to win. I don't have any other."
              She and her mother Raj, as well as her sister, Simran, run an upscale 
                clothing business named Exotica International. It has grown from a small 
                motel room to a 10,000 sq. ft establishment with a revenue in fiscal 
                2003 of $1.8 million, her father Ajit Randhawa.
              "If I win this, I will be the first Indian to be in the (South 
                Carolina) state assembly. So that people can start looking at County 
                boards, school boards. All that is not happening right now," Randhawa-Haley 
                had said during her campaign.
              Born in Bamberg, South Carolina, in 1972, and brought up there before 
                moving to Lexington, Nikki attended Clemson University, majoring in 
                Finance.
              She then worked with FCR Corp as assistant business manager before 
                joining her mother's business in 1994.
              Her father is a retired professor of biology who chaired the department 
                of natural and computer sciences at Voorhees College.
              She is on the board of the Lexington Chamber of Commerce, and president-elect 
                of National Association of Women Business Owners and Chairperson of 
                Lexington Gala raising funds for the local hospital.
              "The reason I decided to get into this was that I am involved 
                in the community already, I was just stepping up my responsibilities, 
                just my way to giving back," Randhawa-Haley said.
              "Also, we currently don't have any Indian holding office. In the 
                past couple of years, we've known people who needed to know someone 
                in government to jump hurdles. That's another reason I thought, we Indians 
                are very good in everything we do, whatever we do extremely well, but 
                we're still not in government.
              "And I really just want to show that we are great at that just 
                as we are in medicine or whatever else we do."
              Randhawa-Haley is now going to have to wait another two weeks before 
                she knows whether she can enter the November race for the State House.