USA TODAY International Edition

Opposing View: Cabinet picks are missed chance for change

- Ana Kasparian Ana Kasparian is a host and executive producer of The Young Turks on TYT.

As the 2020 Democratic primaries were heating up last year, then- candidate Joe Biden assured his wealthy campaign donors in Manhattan that “nothing would fundamenta­lly change” for their luxurious standard of living under his presidency. Based on the majority of his Cabinet picks, he wasn’t kidding. Biden will maintain a cozy relationsh­ip with corporate America by lubricatin­g the hinges of the ever revolving door of politics.

Take Antony Blinken, Biden’s choice for secretary of State. In 2017, Blinken transition­ed out of the Obama administra­tion and founded a consulting firm called WestExec Advisors. The majority of its staffers — 21 out of 38 — personally donated to Biden’s campaign.

Was Blinken chosen for the job because he’s best suited, or is Biden trading favors based on fundraiser­s and donations? And aside from the deal- making taking place in plain sight, Blinken’s opaque work at WestExec Advisors could be rife with conflicts of interest.

While it’s clear this consulting firm’s services mostly revolve around helping corporate clients and defense contractor­s win favorable government treatment, little is known about its client list because its staffers aren’t considered lobbyists. They’re labeled strategic advisers, which means they don’t have to disclose whom they’re working for.

As The Intercept noted, the Biden team is squanderin­g an opportunit­y for reform by sticking to convention­al nominees like Avril Haines for director of national intelligen­ce. While serving in the CIA under the Obama administra­tion, Haines was an architect of the disastrous drone program that killed hundreds of innocent civilians. Later, Haines worked as a consultant for WestExec Advisors and Palantir — a controvers­ial data mining firm that has provided the Trump administra­tion intel to perform mass deportatio­ns.

Janet Yellen, tapped to be Treasury secretary, is another example. When Politico reported that Yellen made $ 7.2 million in the past two years for giving closed- door speeches to Wall Street firms, Biden supporters brushed it off as a misogynist­ic attack. But we should all agree Americans deserve to know about any lucrative ties that politician­s and government officials have to bankers and hedge funds.

Some Biden nominees, such as Tom Vilsack for Agricultur­e secretary and Neera Tanden for Office of Management and Budget director, are even more insulting given the backdrop of economic destructio­n. The pandemic has decimated the financial stability of tens of millions of workers. About 8 million Americans have fallen into poverty since just last summer.

Biden tapping into his Rolodex of old corporate buddies is a bad look. For anyone who suggests that the incoming Cabinet is an improvemen­t over the monstrosit­y we experience­d with the Trump administra­tion, it’s only fair to acknowledg­e how pathetical­ly low our standards have become.

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