Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Cabinet selection a delicate dance

Picks need to meet goals, please left, get confirmed

- Will Weissert and Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON – Shortly after President-elect Joe Biden’s victory last month, Cabinet hopeful Marcia Fudge pointedly noted that Black people are often typecast into positions such as housing secretary.

On Friday, Biden announced Fudge, a prominent Black congresswo­man from Ohio, was his nominee for that very role. She was introduced alongside Biden’s pick for the job she initially sought, head of the Agricultur­e Department. That went instead to Tom Vilsack, a 70-year-old white man who already spent eight years in the position during the Obama administra­tion.

Those nomination­s highlight the competing priorities Biden is facing as he fills out the top ranks of his administra­tion. He’s pledged to nominate the most diverse Cabinet in history and restore experience at beleaguere­d federal agencies. He’s seeking to reward loyalists who have stood with him throughout his lengthy career and give opportunit­ies to new voices in the Democratic Party. Each of his nominees has to win confirmation in a narrowly divided Senate that could be controlled by Republican­s, depending on who wins two runoff races in Georgia next month. The GOP has barely acknowledg­ed Biden’s victory, so the cooperatio­n of its senators in the confirmation process is far from certain.

“There’s a lot of pressure, and part of the reason you saw such big turnout is that people are eager for change from the Trump years,” Democratic strategist Karen Finney said. “That creates a lot of high expectatio­ns.”

The challenge won’t get easier. Biden is facing a decision on attorney general that will come under intense scrutiny from Black leaders, who want someone with a background in civil rights advocacy, and Republican­s, who are demanding political independen­ce as Biden’s son, Hunter, faces a federal investigat­ion into his finances. Some of those tensions emerged last week during a meeting between Biden and civil rights leaders who pressed the incoming president to diversify his Cabinet and warned about the Vilsack pick in particular.

Vilsack has been criticized for the firing of department official Shirley Sherrod, who is Black, during his last stint at the USDA, a move for which he later apologized.

NAACP President Derrick Johnson warned Biden that the Vilsack selection could hurt Black turnout in the critical Georgia contests.

“Vilsack could have a disastrous effect on voters in the state of Georgia,” Johnson told Biden during the meeting, which was private.

Audio was leaked to The Intercept, which released excerpts.

Biden bristled at such concern, saying, “Let’s get something straight, you shouldn’t be upset.

“What I’ve done so far is more than what anyone else has done this far,” he said. “I mean what I say.”

The president-elect has several more Cabinet posts to fill and has made history with some of his early selections. He nominated retired Army Gen. Lloyd Austin to be the first Black person to lead the Pentagon, while picking California Attorney General Xavier Becerra to be the first Latino to lead the Health and Human Services Department. His nominee for U.S. trade envoy, Katherine Tai, was born in Connecticu­t to Taiwanese parents.

But those choices were announced after African Americans, Latinos and Asian Americans in Congress voiced concerns that their perspectiv­es may not be fully represente­d in the new administra­tion. Some nominees will face other hurdles, most notably Austin, who needs a waiver to fill the civilian role leading the Pentagon. That’s a step some Democrats have historical­ly opposed. Biden could further diversify his Cabinet by picking Rep. Deb Haaland of New Mexico as the first Native American interior secretary, giving her authority over a powerful agency that oversees the nation’s tribes. But doing so would further erode the razor-thin Democratic majority in the House, something Biden can ill afford considerin­g the party’s tenuous standing in the Senate.

There’s particular frustratio­n that, until Tai’s nomination, there was no one of Asian descent in a Cabinetlev­el secretary position. California Rep. Judy Chu, the chair of the Congressio­nal Asian Pacific American Caucus, said she suggested senior roles for Asian Americans during the campaign and transition, only for action to come at the last minute.

“We tried to work collaborat­ively during the campaign,” Chu said. “That’s why we are worried.”

One prominent feature of Biden’s picks so far: deep ties to the Obama administra­tion. That includes exWhite House chief of staff Denis McDonough as secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs and former U.N. ambassador and national security adviser Susan Rice as director of the White House Domestic Policy Council.

Biden’s team has said long government experience is paramount at a time when the country is facing a historic pandemic and economic uncertaint­y. But other Democrats are urging him to blend those familiar faces with newer voices.

“We have some people who’ve been in the Cabinet before – there’s a role for those people, especially in a crisis like this; they have the knowledge – but it’s important to be adding voices and lifting up the next generation of leaders,” said Rep. Katie Porter, D-Calif.

After a largely centrist primary bid won him the Democratic presidenti­al nomination, Biden sought to incorporat­e more progressiv­e priorities into his general election campaign, promising to invest billions in new green jobs and make major improvemen­ts to infrastruc­ture to battle climate change.

But some progressiv­e leaders, including Sens. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., and Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., seem unlikely to land in the Cabinet, given the transition team’s concerns about poaching from Democrats’ ranks in the Senate. That has left some activists worried that the administra­tion won’t live up to its campaign promises to the party’s left flank.

“I think there are some red flags or, in this case, some discouragi­ng blue flags,” said Norman Solomon, national director of the progressiv­e activist group RootsActio­n.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH/AP ?? President-elect Joe Biden listens to Rep. Marcia Fudge, D-Ohio, his choice to be housing and urban developmen­t secretary.
SUSAN WALSH/AP President-elect Joe Biden listens to Rep. Marcia Fudge, D-Ohio, his choice to be housing and urban developmen­t secretary.

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