Call & Times

Biden picks Raimondo to lead Commerce Department

- By WILL WEISSERT, MICHELLE R. SMITH and AAMER MADHANI

WASHINGTON (AP) — President-elect Joe Biden has picked Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo to lead the Commerce Department, helping set trade policy and looking to promote

U.S. opportunit­ies for growth domestical­ly and overseas.

Raimondo, a former venture capitalist, is in her second term as governor and previously served as state treasurer. Her name had been floated for Biden’s health secretary, though she said last month she would be staying in Rhode Island and continuing to focus on the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Her nomination, which was confirmed by a person familiar with the decision, will need to be approved by the Senate. The person was not authorized to preempt Biden’s announceme­nt and spoke Thursday on condition of anonymity.

The Biden administra­tion’s stance on internatio­nal trade will likely be a significan­t shift away from President Donald Trump’s tariff-heavy approach. The Trump administra­tion imposed tariffs on Chinese goods including steel to punish Beijing for what it said were unfair currency practices and potential national

security threats. Those moves were largely opposed by U.S. allies, including Canada.

Democratic Lt. Gov. Daniel McKee would become acting governor and serve out the final two years of Raimondo’s term if the former venture capitalist heads to D.C.

He’d also have the power to pick a new lieutenant governor to serve out this term, though a bill was filed in the legislatur­e this week to give lawmakers that authority.

McKee told WPRI-TV recently that he’d be ready to lead the state if his time came. The former Cumberland mayor and business owner has often been at odds with Raimondo and her administra­tion’s response to the coronaviru­s pandemic, which has hit the tiny state particular­ly hard.

“My job is to always be prepared in that unlikely scenario,” McKee told WPRI-TV. “I am prepared, and I’ve been working for the last six years to make sure that I am prepared.”

Who would run for governor in 2022 remains an open question.

McKee and two other statewide office holders, Secretary of State Nellie Gorbea and General Treasurer Seth Magaziner, have been floated as potential successors. They’re all Democrats and term-limited.

McKee’s campaign told The Providence Journal in November that there’s a “high likelihood” he’d run, but the spokespeop­le for the other two officehold­ers demurred.

For Republican­s, outgoing Cranston Mayor Allan Fung ran twice unsuccessf­ully for governor – both times against Raimondo – and could decide the third time’s the charm.

“My fortune cookie said stay tuned. Many surprises in store in the future,” Fung told the Journal in November.

Biden opposes Chinese tariffs and has promised to improve U.S. relationsh­ips with countries around the hemisphere and globe. But he hasn’t indicated that undoing the tariffs will be a top priority. Instead he has promised to while campaignin­g for president to oversee an aggressive “Buy American” campaign that would use federal funds to purchase $400 billion of U.S.-made goods while spending an additional $300 billion on new research and developmen­t from domestic technology firms.

Raimondo, 49, has degrees from Harvard and Yale Law School and was a Rhodes scholar.

She served as a law clerk for U.S. District Judge Kimba Wood of the Southern District of New York, but ultimately went into business, becoming a venture capitalist. The firm she co-founded, Point Judith Capital, was an early-stage venture capital firm that invested in communicat­ions, internet, health care and technology companies.

Raimondo’s first run for office was in 2010, when she was elected state treasurer. While there, she led a state pension overhaul, which cut pension benefits for workers in the state pension system and drew intense opposition from public sector unions. The overhaul was so bitter and controvers­ial that it has created divisions that persist 10 years later.

Raimondo was elected governor in 2014 with just under 41% of the vote in a threeway race. She won reelection in 2018 with more than 52%. She is term-limited and cannot run again.

Raimondo is a former head of the Democratic Governors Associatio­n and a prolific fundraiser. She became an early supporter of Mike Bloomberg’s run for president.

Biden’s administra­tion has promised more robust promotion of U.S. exports and to encourage trade that emphasizes protecting the environmen­t and combating climate change.

Biden’s Commerce Department may see much of its political philosophy dictated by his choice for other top economic Cabinet positions, including treasury secretary. Biden picked Janet Yellen, a former Federal Reserve chair and labor economist who, if confirmed by the Senate, would be the first woman to hold the post.

Yellen will be tasked with mapping the nation’s post-pandemic economic recovery, determinin­g how to stimulate growth and safely reopen some parts of the economy that have been allbut shuttered for months. She has already said she plans to use her agency to help combat economic inequality, which has reached historic proportion­s nationwide, and to combat climate change.

 ??  ?? Gina Raimondo
Gina Raimondo
 ??  ?? Daniel J. McKee
Daniel J. McKee

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