The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Biden taps Buttigieg for transporta­tion, Granholm for energy

- By Michael Balsamo, Jonathan Lemire and Thomas Beaumont

WASHINGTON » Presidente­lect Joe Biden said Tuesday that he is nominating his former rival Pete Buttigieg as secretary of transporta­tion. He also intends to choose former Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm as his energy secretary, according to four people familiar with the plans.

Buttigieg would be the first openly gay person confirmed by the Senate to a Cabinet post. At 38, the former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, would also add a youthful dynamic to an incoming administra­tion that is so far dominated in large part by leaders with decades of Washington experience.

Biden said in a statement that Buttigieg was a “patriot and a problem-solver who speaks to the best of who we are as a nation.”

“I am nominating him for Secretary of Transporta­tion because this position stands at the nexus of so many of the interlocki­ng challenges and opportunit­ies ahead of us,” Biden said, “Jobs, infrastruc­ture, equity, and climate all come together at the DOT, the site of some of our most ambitious plans to build back better.”

Granholm, 61, served as Michigan’s attorney general from 1999 to 2003 and two terms as Michigan’s first female governor, from 2003 to 2010. She was a supporter of Biden’s presidenti­al bid and has spoken out against President Donald Trump’s attempts to overturn the election results, accusing him of

“poisoning democracy.”

Her intended nomination was confirmed by two people who were familiar with her selection. They spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly before the president-elect’s announceme­nt.

Biden is steadily rolling out his choices for Cabinet secretarie­s, having already selected former Obama adviser Tony Blinken as his secretary of state, retired Army Gen. Lloyd Austin as his secretary of defense and former Fed Chair Janet Yellen as his treasury secretary. He’s also picked former Agricultur­e Secretary Tom Vilsack to reprise that role in the Biden administra­tion, and Ohio Rep. Marcia Fudge to serve as housing secretary.

Buttigieg became a leading figure in national politics when he was among those who challenged Biden for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination this year. Initially written off as the leader of a relatively small town competing against far more establishe­d figures, Buttigieg zeroed in on a message of generation­al change to finish the first-in-the-nation Iowa caucuses in a virtual tie with Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.

His campaign stumbled, however, in appealing to Black voters who play a critical role in Democratic politics. As the primary moved into more diverse states such as South Carolina, Buttigieg faltered and quickly withdrew from the race. His backing of Biden ushered in a remarkably swift unificatio­n

of the party around its ultimate nominee.

As for Granholm, as energy secretary she will have a role in executing Biden’s promised $2 trillion climate plan, billed as the nation’s broadest and most ambitious effort to cut fossil fuel emissions that are dangerousl­y warming Earth’s atmosphere.

Biden’s plan includes overhaulin­g the nation’s transporta­tion and power sectors and buildings to eliminate fossil fuel emissions by 2050. Biden says he will return the United States to the Paris climate accord as a first step after President Donald Trump yanked the country out of the global climate effort.

As governor, when Granholm faced an economic downturn before the Great Recession struck, she sought to diversify the state that is home to the Detroit Three automakers by emphasizin­g the growing “green economy.” The state pushed incentives to manufactur­e

wind turbines, solar panels, advanced batteries and electric vehicles, and she signed a law requiring that more of Michigan’s energy come from renewable sources.

After leaving office, she moved to California to teach at the University of California, Berkeley. She is a political contributo­r on CNN.

Biden’s selection of Buttigieg for transporta­tion secretary drew praise from LGBTQ rights groups, with one calling it “a new milestone in a decades-long effort” to have LGBTQ representa­tion in the U.S. government.

“Its impact will reverberat­e well-beyond the department he will lead,” added Annise Parker, president and CEO of the LGBTQ Victory Institute.

The South Bend chapter of Black Lives Matter, however, denounced Buttigieg’s impending nomination. The group had made their displeasur­e of Buttigieg known during his presidenti­al campaign, following the 2019 South Bend shooting of a

Black man by a white police officer.

“We saw Black communitie­s have their houses torn down by his administra­tion,” BLM’s South Bend leader Jorden Giger said in a statement, referring to Buttigieg’s effort to tear down substandar­d housing. “We saw the machinery of his police turned against Black people.”

It’s long been clear that Biden would find some role for Buttigieg in his administra­tion. The two became close during the primary, chatting before debates and other campaign events.

Biden has said that Buttigieg reminds him of his late son, Beau, who was Delaware’s attorney general before dying from brain cancer at 46 in 2015.

“To me, it’s the highest compliment I can give any man or woman,” Biden said in March as Buttigieg offered his endorsemen­t. “Like Beau, he has a backbone like a ramrod.”

Now Buttigieg will play a central role in shaping some of Biden’s leading policy priorities.

Biden has pledged to spend billions making major infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts and on retrofitti­ng initiative­s that can help the U.S. battle climate change. He also wants to immediatel­y mandate mask-wearing on airplanes and public transporta­tion systems to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s.

Infrastruc­ture spending can be a bipartisan issue, and President Donald Trump spent years promising to push a major bill through Congress that never materializ­ed. Instead his administra­tion moved to soften carbon emissions standards that Biden’s team will likely work to undo as part of the broader commitment to slowing global warming.

Despite having governed a city of barely 100,000, Buttigieg was credited with transformi­ng traffic with his Smart Streets initiative, a three-year project to convert 8 miles (12.9 kilometers) of multilane thoroughfa­res into two-way routes that enhanced South Bend’s downtown. The project received awards for environmen­tal protection.

Though on a far smaller scale than the nation’s transporta­tion systems, the project, as well as Buttigieg’s initiative to convert the city’s sewers to a smartflow system, demonstrat­es what supporters praised as Buttigieg’s next-generation infrastruc­ture vision.

Biden also plans to tap former Environmen­tal Protection Agency chief Gina McCarthy to spearhead his ambitions for a massive, coordinate­d domestic campaign to slow climate change. Her counterpar­t in climate efforts will be former Secretary of State John Kerry, earlier named by Biden as his climate envoy for national security issues.

The selection is in line with Biden’s pattern of picking tested, familiar figures from his time as vice president. McCarthy, 66, served as EPA administra­tor from 2013 to 2017 during President Barack Obama’s second term and was assistant administra­tor for the Office of Air and Radiation in Obama’s first term.

 ?? BEBETO MATTHEWS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this April 29, 2019 file photo, then Democratic presidenti­al candidate Mayor Pete Buttigieg, from South Bend, Indiana, listens during a lunch meeting with civil rights leader Rev. Al Sharpton at Sylvia’s Restaurant in Harlem neighborho­od of New York.
BEBETO MATTHEWS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this April 29, 2019 file photo, then Democratic presidenti­al candidate Mayor Pete Buttigieg, from South Bend, Indiana, listens during a lunch meeting with civil rights leader Rev. Al Sharpton at Sylvia’s Restaurant in Harlem neighborho­od of New York.

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