San Antonio Express-News

Trump accepts handoff to Biden

Women, Hispanic man poised to be Cabinet firsts

- By Michael Crowley and Jeanna Smialek

WASHINGTON — President-elect Joe Biden plans to name Janet Yellen as Treasury secretary, a nomination that would put a woman in charge of the Treasury for the first time in its 231-year history.

The expected appointmen­t came as Biden moved to fill other top Cabinet roles, selecting Alejandro Mayorkas as the first Latino to lead the Homeland Security Department and Avril Haines as the first woman to be director of national intelligen­ce.

Biden is also expected to create a new post of internatio­nal climate envoy and to fill it with John Kerry, a former secretary of state who was a chief negotiator for the U.S. on the Paris climate change accord.

In choosing Yellen, who was also the first woman to lead the Federal Reserve, Biden is turning to a renowned labor economist at a moment of high unemployme­nt, when millions of Americans remain out of work and the economy continues to

struggle because of the coronaviru­s.

Yellen, 74, is likely to bring a long-held preference for government help for households that are struggling economical­ly. But she will be thrust into negotiatin­g for more aid with what is expected to be a divided Congress, pushing her into a far more political role than the one she played at the independen­t central bank.

“While the pandemic is still seriously affecting the economy, we need to continue extraordin­ary fiscal support,” Yellen said in a Bloomberg Television interview last month. Her expected nomination was reported earlier by the Wall Street Journal.

The emerging diplomatic, intelligen­ce and economic teams, as outlined by transition officials, reunite a group of former senior officials from the Obama administra­tion. Most worked closely together at the State Department and the White House and in several cases have close ties to Biden dating back years. Biden will officially announce some of them today at an event in Wilmington, Del.

They share a belief in the core principles of the Democratic foreign policy establishm­ent: internatio­nal cooperatio­n, strong U.S. alliances and leadership but a wariness of foreign interventi­ons after the wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n.

The transition office confirmed reports Sunday night that Biden will nominate Antony Blinken to be secretary of state and Jake Sullivan as national security adviser.

Biden will also nominate Linda Thomas-Greenfield to be ambassador to the U.N. and restore the job to Cabinet-level status, giving Thomas-Greenfield, who is African American, a seat on his National Security Council.

The racial and gender mix of the expected nominees reflects Biden’s stated commitment to diversity, which has lagged in the worlds of foreign policy and national security.

The slate of picks also shows Biden’s determinat­ion to push forward with setting up his administra­tion despite President Donald Trump’s continuing refusal to concede. Biden received help on that front Monday evening, when the head of the General Services Administra­tion formally designated him the apparent election winner, unlocking federal funds and resources to begin a transition and authorizin­g his advisers to begin coordinati­ng with Trump administra­tion officials.

Kerry’s job does not require Senate confirmati­on. A statement released by the transition office said Kerry “will fight climate change full time as special presidenti­al envoy for climate and will sit on the National Security Council.

To manage his domestic climate policies, Biden will also soon name a White House climate director, who will have equal standing with Kerry, according to transition officials.

Mayorkas, if confirmed, would be the first Latino to run the Homeland Security Department, which is charged with putting in place and managing the nation’s immigratio­n policies. He served as deputy Homeland Security secretary from 2013 to 2016.

A Cuban-born immigrant whose family fled the Castro revolution, he is a former U.S. attorney in California and was director of Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services in President Barack Obama’s first term. He will have to restore trust in the department after many key Democratic constituen­cies came to see it as the vessel for some of Trump’s most contentiou­s policies, such as separating migrant children from their families and building a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.

Top immigratio­n officials in the Obama administra­tion recommende­d Mayorkas’ nomination as a way to build support with the immigrant community while satisfying moderates and career officials within the agency who are looking for a leader with a background in law enforcemen­t.

Haines, the potential director of national intelligen­ce, served as deputy CIA director in the Obama administra­tion before succeeding Blinken as Obama’s deputy national security adviser. She is a former aide to Biden, serving as deputy chief counsel to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee from 2007 to 2008, while Biden was chairman. Haines also served” as counsel to Obama’s National Security Council, helping him navigate legal issues around counterter­rorism operations and pressing for more restraint to reduce civilian casualties.

If confirmed, Haines will be the highest-ranking woman to serve in the intelligen­ce community. The CIA director, now led by its first female director, Gina Haspel, reports to the director of national intelligen­ce.

Thomas-Greenfield is a 35-year foreign service veteran who has served in diplomatic posts around the world. She served from 2013 to 2017 as assistant secretary of state for African affairs. Just as important in the view of Biden officials is her time as a former director general and human resources director of the foreign service. They see it as positionin­g her to help restore morale at a State Department where many career officials felt ignored and even undermined during the Trump years. “We have no time to lose when it comes to our national security and foreign policy,” Biden said in a statement provided by his transition office. “I need a team ready on Day 1 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.” “These individual­s are equally as experience­d and crisis-tested as they are innovative and imaginativ­e,” he added. “Their accomplish­ments in diplomacy are unmatched, but they also reflect the idea that we cannot meet the profound challenges of this new moment with old thinking and unchanged habits — or without diversity of background and perspectiv­e. It’s why I’ve selected them.” In Blinken, 58, Biden chose a confidant of more than 20 years who served as his top aide on the Foreign Relations Committee before joining his vice presidenti­al staff, where he served as Biden’s national security adviser. He also was the principal deputy national security adviser to Obama and then deputy secretary of state from 2015 to 2017. Blinken is widely viewed as a pragmatic centrist on foreign policy who, like Biden, has supported past U.S. interventi­ons and believes that the U.S. must play a

central leadership role in the world. Biden most likely calculated that the soft-spoken Blinken, who is well regarded by many Republican­s, will face a less difficult Senate confirmati­on fight than another top contender, former national security adviser Susan Rice.

Blinken began his career at the State Department during the Clinton administra­tion.

Sullivan will take the White House’s top national security job and, at 44 when he takes office, will be the youngest person to hold that position after McGeorge Bundy, who took over the job at 41 under President John F. Kennedy.

Sullivan followed Blinken as Biden’s top national security aide and was a senior aide to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Along the way, Sullivan found admirers even among conservati­ve Republican­s in Congress while playing a key role in the negotiatio­ns leading to the 2015 Iran nuclear deal.

A Minnesota native, Sullivan in recent months has helped lead a project at the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace reconceivi­ng U.S. foreign policy around the needs of the American middle class.

Yellen’s path to the top job at Treasury may have been paved by the man who rejected her for a second stint as Fed chair: Trump.

Yellen wanted to be reappointe­d when her term at the head of the central bank ended in 2018, but Trump, eager to install his own pick, decided against renominati­ng her.

Instead, he chose Jerome Powell, the Fed’s current chair, breaking with precedent. The previous three Fed chairs had been reappointe­d by presidents of the opposite political party.

But it may have cleared the way for Yellen — who became an economist at a time when few women entered or rose in the male-dominated field — to break yet another public policy glass ceiling.

 ?? Chandan Khanna / AFP via Getty Images ?? The designatio­n of Joe Biden as the apparent victor of the election clears the way for his advisers to coordinate with Trump administra­tion officials in the presidenti­al transition.
Chandan Khanna / AFP via Getty Images The designatio­n of Joe Biden as the apparent victor of the election clears the way for his advisers to coordinate with Trump administra­tion officials in the presidenti­al transition.
 ??  ?? John Kerry could become internatio­nal climate envoy, a new post Biden plans to create.
John Kerry could become internatio­nal climate envoy, a new post Biden plans to create.
 ??  ?? Avril Haines would be the first woman to become director of national intelligen­ce.
Avril Haines would be the first woman to become director of national intelligen­ce.
 ??  ?? Joe Biden selected Alejandro Mayorkas to lead Homeland Security.
Joe Biden selected Alejandro Mayorkas to lead Homeland Security.

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