Chicago Sun-Times

Obama Foundation chief tapped by Biden

- BY LYNN SWEET, WASHINGTON BUREAU CHIEF lsweet@suntimes.com | @lynnsweet

WASHINGTON — President-elect Joe Biden picked Obama Foundation President and economist Adewale “Wally” Adeyemo on Monday to be deputy secretary of the Treasury.

Adeyemo, a Hyde Park resident, joined the Obama Foundation in August 2019 as its first president.

He came to the foundation after serving in a variety of positions in the Obama administra­tion. After leaving the White House, he signed on as a senior adviser at BlackRock, the global investment firm, and the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies.

During the tenure of President Barack Obama, Adeyemo was the deputy director of the National Economic Council; the assistant secretary for internatio­nal markets and developmen­t at the Treasury Department; deputy chief of staff of the Treasury Department in 2012; and chief of staff of the Consumer Financial Protection

Bureau for 16 months, starting in 2010.

Adeyemo received his undergradu­ate degree from the University of California at Berkeley and a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School.

According to the Obama Foundation, Adeyemo’s salary was $600,000.

The Adeyemo appointmen­t came as part of Biden’s unveiling on Monday of his economic team, where he highlighte­d the historic nature of some of his nomination­s. Born in Nigeria and raised in Southern California, Adeyemo, if confirmed, would be the first African American deputy secretary of the Treasury.

Other “firsts” among nominees: † Janet Yellen, nominated to serve as secretary of the Treasury; if confirmed, she will be the first woman to lead the Treasury Department.

† Neera Tanden, nominated to serve as director of the Office of Management and Budget; if confirmed, Tanden would be the first woman of color and first South Asian American to lead the OMB.

† Cecilia Rouse, nominated to serve as chair of the Council of Economic Advisers; if confirmed, Rouse will become the first African American and the fourth woman to lead the CEA.

Flossmoor’s Mala Adiga named Jill Biden’s policy director

In other appointmen­ts, Mala Adiga was named policy director for the incoming first lady, Jill Biden. She was a senior adviser to Jill Biden and a senior policy adviser on the Biden-Harris campaign. Before the campaign, Adiga was at the Biden Foundation, where she was the director for higher education and military families programs.

Raised in south suburban Flossmoor, Adiga, who is Indian American, went to Flossmoor Hills and what was then called Flossmoor Junior High School. She is a 1989 graduate of Homewood-Flossmoor High School.

When Adiga was a law student at the University of Chicago, one of her instructor­s was one Barack Obama. That introducti­on eventually led her on her path to the White House — first in the Obama administra­tion and soon the Biden administra­tion.

After graduating law school in 2002, Adiga was a litigation associate at the law firm of Kirkland & Ellis LLP and clerked for U.S. District Court Judge Philip Simon in the Northern District of Indiana before joining Obama’s 2008 presidenti­al campaign legal team.

Once Obama was elected, she moved from Hyde Park to Washington to join the Obama administra­tion, where she served in a variety of policy roles: she was a deputy assistant secretary of state; a chief of staff and senior adviser for the Secretary’s office of Global Women’s Issues; on then-Vice President Joe Biden’s National Security staff and in the Justice Department office of the associate attorney general.

Adiga also has a master’s in public health from the University of Minnesota; her undergradu­ate degree is from Grinnell College.

 ?? BIDEN TRANSITION TEAM ?? “Wally” Adeyemo
BIDEN TRANSITION TEAM “Wally” Adeyemo

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