Los Angeles Times

Biden’s Homeland Security pick

California attorney Alejandro Mayorkas would be first Latino and first immigrant to hold Cabinet post.

- By Molly O’Toole

A California attorney would be the f irst Latino and immigrant in the Cabinet post.

WASHINGTON — President- elect Joe Biden on Monday named Alejandro Mayorkas as his Homeland Security secretary, a move that could make the Cuban American and former federal prosecutor in California the first Latino and first immigrant to serve in the Cabinet post.

Mayorkas, who was born in Havana, grew up in Los Angeles and attended UC Berkeley and Loyola Law School. He began working for the government as an assistant United States attorney in the Central District of California, specializi­ng in white- collar crime, and went on to become the youngest U. S. attorney in the country, according to the Biden transition announceme­nt.

“When I was very young, the United States provided my family and me a place of refuge,” Mayorkas tweeted shortly after the announceme­nt with a brand- new account reading: “DHS nominee for Joe Biden.” “Now, I have been nominated to be the DHS Secretary and oversee the protection of all Americans and those who f lee persecutio­n in search of a better life for themselves and their loved ones.”

Under the Obama administra­tion, Mayorkas was a primary architect of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program and a primary negotiator of the thaw in then- frozen U. S.- Cuban relations. Both DACA and the opening to Cuba have been primary political targets for President Trump and the Republican Party.

Biden adds Mayorkas to his growing list of picks for national security and foreign policy- focused Cabinet posts.

President Trump, who had been urged by experts from his own party to begin the transition, yielded to the reality that the presidenti­al election will not be overturned and authorized Emi

ly Murphy, administra­tor of the General Services Administra­tion, to start formal transition proceeding­s, though he did not concede.

“We have no time to lose when it comes to our national security and foreign policy,” former Vice President Biden said in a statement Monday. “I need a team ready on Day One to help me reclaim America’s seat at the head of the table, rally the world to meet the biggest challenges we face, and advance our security, prosperity, and values. This is the crux of that team.”

The task facing Mayorkas is a daunting one: steering a Titanic of a department, the federal government’s third- largest with some 240,000 employees, away from being used as a political tool to achieve Trump’s central campaign promise of restrictin­g immigratio­n, in almost the opposite direction.

Biden has promised to reverse many of Trump’s immigratio­n policies, enacted by an unpreceden­tedly politicize­d Homeland Security Department racked by record vacancies and turnover, from an assault on asylum to slashes to family and business- based immigratio­n and restoring DACA.

Trump officials were recently handed another loss in their long- running attempt to end the program, which Biden has promised

to fully restore as one of his first moves in office. The ruling also said that Trump’s last pick for Homeland Security chief, Chad Wolf, was illegally appointed.

Mayorkas will probably face the confirmati­on process in a Republican- majority Senate, as will Biden’s nominees for roughly 1,000 other positions in the incoming administra­tion that need Senate confirmati­on.

Rep. Joaquin Castro ( DTexas), chairman of the Congressio­nal Hispanic Caucus, praised the “historic nomination” of Mayorkas — saying the caucus is urging that Biden pick four more Latinos for his Cabinet. “We share the BidenHarri­s transition team’s goal to create the most diverse administra­tion in U. S. history,” he said in a statement.

Opponents are likely to point to a 2015 Homeland Security Inspector General report that found Mayorkas “exerted improper inf luence” in helping companies obtain employment visas, a finding he has disputed.

But the Biden transition announceme­nt noted that Mayorkas has been conf irmed by the Senate three times already. He has served in the top post at U. S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services, the Homeland Security agency administer­ing the legal immigratio­n system, as well several years as deputy chief of the depart

ment under the Obama administra­tion.

Sen. Robert Menendez ( D- N. J.), a Cuba hawk and ranking member of the Foreign Relations Committee, said in a statement that Mayorkas is “a smart and natural pick” to lead DHS.

“He has the subject matter experience to take on the enormous job of cleaning up after the disastrous and inhumane immigratio­n policies that have torn lives and families apart under the Trump administra­tion,” Menendez said.

The Homeland Security Department, created in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks, has a broad mandate, including emergency response, election security and immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

But Trump’s mark on Homeland Security — xenophobic rhetoric against migrants and a range of documented abuses by the department’s law enforcemen­t officials — will be difficult to erase. Mayorkas also will be immediatel­y confronted with untangling Trump’s more than 400 executive actions on immigratio­n, which could tie up the incoming Biden administra­tion’s own ambitions, including everelusiv­e comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform.

Biden has not caved in to calls for the department to be dissolved. He’s said instead that he’ll increase oversight and training of its law enforcemen­t arms — Customs and Border Protection and the Border Patrol and Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t — which came to be associated with Trump’s more infamous policies, such as family separation and widespread raids.

Mayorkas also helped lead the department’s response to Ebola and Zika under Obama. Both Biden and his picks so far have made clear that the government’s response to the COVID- 19 pandemic will be the most urgent priority.

Notably, Biden has not explicitly committed to ending a controvers­ial authority that Trump’s officials say they were given by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention amid the pandemic that allowed them to effectivel­y close the border and turn away hundreds of thousands of migrants, including asylum seekers and unaccompan­ied children. A judge recently barred the Trump administra­tion from expelling lone immigrant children without due process or access to humanitari­an protection­s under U. S. law.

CDC officials said they rejected the policy as political and not based in public health.

Mayorkas most recently practiced law in the private sector for Los Angelesbas­ed O’Melveny & Myers and WilmerHale in Washington.

In 2015, as the then- No. 2 at DHS, Mayorkas returned to Cuba for the f irst time since his family f led with his mother carrying him to Miami at 6 months old. His father, who died in L. A. in 2012, had always wanted to visit but never got the chance.

Mayorkas’s father’s family emigrated from Turkey and Poland to Cuba in the early 20th century, and his mother was born in a Jewish family in Romania that escaped to Cuba from Nazi- occupied France in the early 1940s, The Times reported at the time.

“He did not want to raise the family in a communist country,” Mayorkas said of his father. “He believed in democracy, and he understood the perils and the challenges of living otherwise.”

 ?? ALEJANDRO MAYORKAS, Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? born in Cuba and raised in L. A., joins a growing list of experts chosen for national security and foreign policy- focused Cabinet posts.
ALEJANDRO MAYORKAS, Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times born in Cuba and raised in L. A., joins a growing list of experts chosen for national security and foreign policy- focused Cabinet posts.

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