The Commercial Appeal

Becerra confirmed to shepherd Biden’s ambitious health plans

- Ricardo Alonso-zaldivar

WASHINGTON – The Senate on Thursday confirmed California Attorney General Xavier Becerra as President Joe Biden’s health secretary, filling a key position in the administra­tion’s coronaviru­s response and its ambitious push to lower drug costs, expand insurance coverage and eliminate racial disparitie­s in medical care.

The 50-49 largely party-line vote makes the 63-year-old Becerra the first Latino to head the Department of Health and Human Services. The $1.4 trillion agency encompasse­s health insurance programs, drug safety and approvals, advanced medical research, substance abuse treatment, and the welfare of children, including hundreds of Central American migrants arriving daily at the U.s.-mexico border.

Sen. Susan Collins of Maine was the only GOP senator to vote for him.

Becerra has been California’s attorney general since 2017. He sued the Trump administra­tion 124 times on a range of policy issues, earning the ire of conservati­ves. Before that he represente­d a Los Angeles-area district in the U.S. House for 24 years. A lawyer, not a doctor, his main experience with the health care system came through helping to pass the Obama-era Affordable Care Act and defending it when Donald Trump was president.

“I understand the enormous challenges before us and our solemn responsibi­lity to be faithful stewards of an agency that touches almost every aspect of our lives,” Becerra said recently at his confirmation hearing. “I’m humbled by the task, and I’m ready for it.” He comes from a workingcla­ss Mexican American family; his father was in road constructi­on and his mother was a secretary.

Leading Republican­s have dismissed Becerra as unfit. But the American Medical Associatio­n and the American Hospital Associatio­n supported his nomination. Two influential lobbying groups, representi­ng the drug industry and health insurers, said after the vote that they look forward to a collaborat­ive working relationsh­ip.

But to Senate Republican leader Mitch Mcconnell of Kentucky, “the distinguis­hing feature of this nominee’s résume is not his expertise in health, medicine, or administra­tion – that part of the resume is very brief. What stands out are Mr. Becerra’s commitment to partisan warfare and his far-left ideology.”

Becerra was reliably liberal in nearly a quarter-century in the House, but he was not seen as a left-wing firebrand.

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