Posted on 11/08/2020 6:08:13 PM PST by SeekAndFind
While President Trump is still far from conceding the election, whose outcome is called not by the media, but by the Electoral College on Dec 14...
... Joe Biden is already busy forming his cabinet, where he need to draw a fine line between the hard-left progressive in the Democratic party (AOC has already been quite vocal in her criticism of how the Squad has been ignored) and centrist elements. Also, in addition to rolling out such new policies as fighting climate change and aggressively promoting women and minorities, Biden will focus on an economic team that will confront the surging unemployment and business slowdown touched off by the coronavirus pandemic. In total, as he builds out his economic team Biden will need to fill out the nearly two dozen cabinet-level positions in his administration.
Starting at the very top, Bloomberg reports that Biden will look for a Treasury secretary and other key officials "to negotiate with Congress on more stimulus, roll back some of President Donald Trumps tax cuts and mend relations with U.S. trading partners." Among the contenders that have emerged to fill the top economic-policy job are Fed Governor Lael Brainard for Treasury and economist Heather Boushey as director of the National Economic Council.
Other crucial jobs include naming the secretaries of Defense, State and Homeland Security, together responsible for carrying out administration policy and overseeing a federal bureaucracy with more than 2 million civilian employees.
While Biden will be mindful of the possibility that a Republican-controlled Senate would almost certainly scuttle nominees for top posts who belong to the progressive wing of the Democratic Party, liberal groups will be policing Bidens choices closely, fearful that he wont reach into their ranks for top positions but will instead choose "moderate" Democrats in his own mold. Biden may try to tamp down that sentiment by putting a liberals in jobs that dont require Senate confirmation.
Most importantly, this means that "the swamp" which Trump vowed to fight - and lost - is back, because in forming his cabinet, Biden will rely on an inner circle of longtime veterans from the Obama administration as well as Wall Streeters.
Finally, while Biden could make history by naming the first women to lead the Defense and Treasury departments, his key White House advisers are likely to be White men.
* * *
With that in mind, here are some of the names being mentioned for the top jobs in a Biden administration according to Bloomberg:
Treasury Department
Lael Brainard, a member of the Fed board since 2014, is the clear favorite to become Treasury secretary. She has resisted loosening bank regulations at the Fed board, dissenting on several measures. On monetary policy, she has been a team player, going along with the majority in every vote. Her experience serving on the Fed board has given her a relationship with Fed Chair Jerome Powell, who plays an important role in orchestrating with Treasury on the response to a faltering economy in the pandemic.
Lael Brainard
Brainard was undersecretary of the Treasury for international affairs during the Obama administration. The Harvard-educated economist said in a speech last month that the biggest downside risk to her outlook would be the failure of additional fiscal support to materialize, which she said risks longer-term scarring to the economys growth potential. The Harvard-educated economist has highlighted some more progressive policies recently, such as the Community Reinvestment Act. In January, she gave a speech highlighting reform efforts necessary to encourage more lending in low- and moderate-income markets.
The Biden team is also said to be looking at Jeff Zients, who was director of the National Economic Council under President Barack Obama. He was widely praised for his work to salvage the website associated with the Affordable Care Act, healthcare.gov, after a disastrous initial rollout, and was then dubbed Mr. Fix-it in the administration. Also on the list are Sylvia Mathews Burwell, who was secretary of Health and Human Services under Obama, as well as Sarah Bloom Raskin, a former Fed governor and Treasury official.
Jeff Zients
Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, one of Bidens progressive rivals for the Democratic nomination, is said to want the job, but she would be a tough sell for confirmation if Republicans control the Senate and is deeply distrusted on Wall Street and in the business community.
Fed Chairman
While Biden is reportedly also working with ex-Fed official Roger Ferguson and Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic, both Black men, for the Treasury position, Bloomberg writes that Bostic is also being considered as a replacement for Powell, whose term is up in 2022. Ferguson was widely praised for his role coordinating the Feds response to the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, when then central bank injected billions of dollars into the economy.
Rafael Bostic
Council of Economic Advisers
According to Bloomberg, Jared Bernstein, Bidens chief economic adviser when he was vice president, has seen his name in contention. A labor economist, Bernstein helped draft a rule almost doubling the salary threshold for overtime pay. Now a senior fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, he is considered left of center and could be a bridge to the progressive wing of the party. He also was an informal adviser to the campaign.
Jared Bernstein
Boushey is also a possibility. She is the president and chief executive officer of the Washington Center for Equitable Growth, a think tank launched in 2013 that focuses on inequality. She has focused on promoting policies such as paid sick days and child care.
National Economic Council
Boushey is also being considered for NEC director. She served as chief economist for Hillary Clintons 2016 presidential transition team and was widely expected to have a prominent economic policy role had Clinton been elected.
State Department
Biden has two top candidates for secretary of state: longtime aide Antony Blinken, who served as Bidens national security adviser. Blinken is a veteran Washington foreign policy hand. He worked as the Democratic staff director on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. He was deputy secretary of state from 2015-2017, when he helped implement the Obama administrations policy pivot to Asia.
Antony Blinken
He also worked in the Obama White House as special assistant to the president and deputy national security adviser. Susan Rice, Obamas national security adviser who was on Bidens short list for vice president, is also being mentioned but Rice would likely not be confirmed by a Republican-controlled Senate.
Defense Department
The odds-on favorite is Michele Flournoy, a former undersecretary of defense who was seen as Clintons pick for the job if shed won in 2016. Flournoy was the highest-ranking woman in Pentagon history when she was the top adviser to then-Defense Secretary Robert Gates in 2009, and would be the first woman to run the Pentagon.
Michele Flournoy
Another potential candidate is Jeh Johnson, who led the Department of Homeland Security under Obama and would be the first Black Defense secretary. Another name being mentioned is Senator Tammy Duckworth of Illinois. She served in the Army Illinois National Guard in Iraq, where she lost both of her legs in combat.
Justice Department
Sally Yates, a career federal prosecutor who was named deputy attorney general by Obama is among those being chatted about. She served as acting attorney general for 10 days at the beginning of the Trump administration until Trump fired her for insubordination after she refused to defend the ban on travelers from several Muslim-majority countries.
Sally Yates
Others under consideration are Senator Doug Jones of Alabama, who lost his re-election bid, and Preet Bharara, the former U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York who was fired by Trump.
Homeland Security
The top candidate is Lisa Monaco, who served as Obamas homeland security adviser. He reportedly gave her the nickname Dr. Doom because of her dark assessments of the terrorism threat. She worked for the Biden campaign running what it called a network of teams vetting potential vice-presidential candidates. She also served on the committee advising Biden on a response to the coronavirus.
Intelligence
The leading contender to head either the CIA or be Director of National Intelligence is Avril Haines. She served as deputy national security adviser in the Obama administration. She was also deputy director of the CIA under Obama, the first woman to hold the position. In a top intelligence role, she would take the lead on rebuilding the intelligence community, aka the "deep state", which has been at odds with Trump.
Coronavirus Czar
Biden has proposed creating a special position to oversee the response to the pandemic. Members of the coronavirus task force Biden assembled during the campaign could be considered, including Vivek Murthy, a former surgeon general under Obama, and David Kessler, who led the Food and Drug Administration in the Obama administration.
Vivek Murthy
Biden has also said he wants Anthony Fauci, the head of the National Institute of Infectious Diseases who has become a contrary voice to Trump about managing the pandemic, to have a role in his administration.
Climate Chief
Biden is considering establishing a new climate czar to coordinate efforts to fight global warming. Top candidates include former Secretary of State John Kerry, who helped broker the landmark Paris climate accord. During his more than a quarter-century representing Massachusetts in the Senate, Kerry led an unsuccessful push for a carbon cap-and-trade program. Another potential pick is Jay Inslee, the newly re-elected governor of Washington and self-styled climate candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination who has argued for a full mobilization of the United States to fight global warming. Inslee, who spent two terms in the U.S. House, also left an imprint on Bidens climate plans, including the president-elects marquee plan to make U.S. electricity carbon-free by 2035. John Podesta, former President Bill Clintons chief of staff, has also been mentioned.
John Kerry
Environmental Protection Agency
The EPA administrator post will be crucial to advancing Bidens aggressive plans for fighting climate change. The top candidates are California air regulator Mary Nichols and Mississippis Heather McTeer Toney, a regional EPA administrator for several Southern states under Obama. For more than 50 years, Nichols has been at the vanguard of American environmentalism, pushing clean air and climate policies in California that are a model for the nation and the 13 states that specifically adhere to them. But the so-called queen of green could face opposition in a Republican-controlled Senate because of her high-profile status as an environmental leader and chief foe of Trumps climate policy rollbacks. Toney was the first Black, female, and, having been elected at age 27, the youngest person ever to serve as mayor of Greenville, Mississippi. Now, shes the national field director for the Moms Clean Air Force, a grassroots group dedicated to fighting air pollution. Also under consideration are former Delaware regulator and National Wildlife Federation Chief Executive Officer Collin OMara; former Connecticut regulator Dan Esty; former Washington State Governor Christine Gregoire; and Inslee.
Mary Nichols
Health and Human Services
The leading contenders are two women who Biden also considered for vice president: Representative Karen Bass of California, head of the Congressional Black Caucus, and New Mexico Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham. Bass, who was a physician assistant before coming to Congress, has made health care a focus of her career. Her support Medicare-for-All legislation, which Biden has rejected, could make her a tough sell for confirmation to lead the agency that administers the health care system.
Michelle Lujan Grisham
Before becoming governor, Grisham was New Mexicos secretary of health and helped build up the states public health system. She was the first Democratic Hispanic elected governor of a U.S. state and the first female Democratic governor of New Mexico. She has led her states response to the coronavirus pandemic since the outbreak worsened in the spring.
Housing and Urban Development
Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, who was also on the short list as a vice-presidential candidate, is under consideration. As a Black woman and the mayor of a majority Black city, she was praised for her response to the civil unrest last summer.
Keisha Lance Bottoms
Transportation
Phillip Washington, the head of the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority is under consideration, as is Sarah Feinberg, the interim president of the New York City Transit Authority and former administrator of the Federal Railroad Administration.
Phillip Washington
Veterans Affairs
Pete Buttigieg, the former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, who ran against Biden in the primary is a distinct possibility. He was on Bidens transition team and was a prominent surrogate for the nominee on the campaign trail. Buttigieg served as in the Navy Reserves in Afghanistan. He would be the first openly gay head of the agency.
Pete Buttigieg
Duckworth was head of the Illinois Department of Veterans Affairs. She was the first female double amputee elected to the Senate and first senator to give birth while in office. A Thai-American, she would be another Asian-American woman at the top of the Biden administration, along with Vice President-elect Kamala Harris, whose mother was born in India. Duckworth, who was a lieutenant colonel in the Illinois Army National Guard, has ancestors who have served in every major U.S. conflict since the Revolutionary War.
UN Ambassador
Buttigieg has also been one of the names circulating for U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. Serving in this post, which has been a cabinet-level job in some administrations, would serve several purposes for Buttigieg. It would allow him to practice the seven languages he says he speaks --Norwegian, Spanish, Italian, Maltese, Arabic, Dari and French -- and would burnish his foreign policy credentials should the 38-year-old decide to run for the presidency again.
National Security Adviser
Blinken, who is also being considered for the State Department, has worked with Biden since he was in the Senate. He said recently that the next administrations foreign policy would aim to reverse the U.S.s withdrawal from global affairs under Trump. Wed actually show up again, day-in, day-out, he told Axios in October. Rice is also a possibility for this job, which doesnt require Senate confirmation. But she may not want it, since she had the same job in the Obama administration.
Another strong candidate for a senior foreign policy position is Jake Sullivan, who served as Bidens national security adviser when he was vice president and and was an adviser to Clinton when she was secretary of state.
Jake Sullivan
Colin Kahl, who also served as Bidens national security adviser when he was vice president, has also been considered.
Agriculture Department
Former Senator Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota is most frequently mentioned. She has led a Democratic rural outreach group, the One Country Project, and has been active as a surrogate for Biden in rural areas.
Heidi Heitkamp
Other candidates include Representative Cheri Bustos of Illinois, who leads the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee; California Agriculture Secretary Karen Ross, a former chief of staff to Obama Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, and Krysta Harden, a former Obama deputy agriculture secretary who now works with Vilsack as chief operating officer at the Dairy Export Council, are also often mentioned.
Interior Department
Retiring Senator Tom Udall of New Mexico is the top contender to be secretary of Interior. His father, Stewart Udall, was Interior secretary from 1961 to 1969 and is credited with a major expansion in federal land protection, including the creation of dozens of wildlife refuges, national parks and recreation areas. Udall, who says conservation is in his DNA, has laid out plans to enlist federal lands in the fight against climate change and has driven efforts to block drilling near the sandstone mesas and ruins of northwest New Mexicos Greater Chaco region. Representative Deb Haaland, another Democrat from New Mexico, and Representative Raul Grijalva, a Democrat from Arizona who leads the House Natural Resources Committee, also have won praise from environmental groups and been recommended to head the Interior Department.
Chief of Staff
The leading candidate is Ron Klain, who was Bidens vice presidential chief of staff and led the Obama administrations economic recovery and Ebola crisis response. Those experiences would be particularly relevant, given that Biden would be tackling coronavirus and the resulting economic downturn upon taking office.
Ron Klain
Steve Ricchetti is also a former Biden vice-presidential chief of staff, and was chairman of Bidens 2020 campaign. Also being mentioned is Zients, a co-chair of Bidens transition team and a former director of the National Economic Council under Obama. Close associates such as Ted Kaufman, Bidens longtime chief of staff in the Senate who led the transition team, and Senator Chris Coons of Delaware, could also play big roles in the inner circle.
Other candidates:
According to Politico, Meg Whitman is a likely frontrunner for the Commerce position, Ernest Moniz is seen as the most likely head of the Department of Energy.
What about Republicans?
According to Bloomberg, the close and bitter end to his fight with Trump will increase pressure on Biden to pick a Republican for his cabinet in a nod at bipartisanship, as Obama did with his first Defense secretary. Possible contenders include two Republicans who spoke at the Democratic convention: former Ohio Governor John Kasich and Meg Whitman, a tech executive who ran for California governor. He is also said to be considering the late Senator John McCains wife, Cindy McCain, for a role, along with Governor Charlie Baker of Massachusetts, former Senator Jeff Flake of Arizona and former Representative Charlie Dent of Pennsylvania.
John Kasich
This cant be correct , the Bee said Buttmunch would be Secretary of Gay Stuff
Using a 2018 vote in Kentucky and 2020 vote in Texas, this man shows exactly how massive numbers of votes are changed in elections! Explains how Trump went from huge leads in the key states with Democrat governors to major losses after their middle of night shutdowns for about 3 hours. Georgia has a Rep. gov. But we also had a shutdown in the middle of the night based on a broken pipe that a lady I met where they were counting still in Fulton County said there was absolutely no reason for them to shut it down. Its well worth watching. An amazing eye opener.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ficae6x1Q5A&feature=emb_logo
Wouldn’t naming JF’nK a Tsar be Rooskie collusion?
Wasnt Buttigieg a Rear Admiral in the Navy?
Daily Mail suggests Joe will put Stacey Abrams on the Supreme Court lolololol....What is Hillary going to get? Someone mentioned Defense. Terrifying possibilities
You really need to just stop it!
Where is going to get you in the end?
You really need to just stop it!
Where is it going to get you in the end?
RE: Wasnt Buttigieg a Rear Admiral in the Navy?
No, he was an ensign in naval intelligence. He also was part of a unit assigned to identify and disrupt terrorist finance networks.
Part of this was done at Bagram Air Base, but he was also an armed driver for his commander on more than 100 trips into Kabul. Buttigieg has jokingly referred to this role as “military Uber”, because he had to watch out for ambushes and explosive devices along the roads and ensure that the vehicle was guarded.
I think he wants lewinsky’s old job
Guess you missed the point...
Clearly you don’t get the joke.
What a miserable cast of characters
Ay least a Rear Admirer.
Let’s hope NONE of this comes to pass.
So he’s bringing the fake Irishman back? John Kohn Kerry? Yeah, have him destroy the economy with the climate hoax, then on the side he can get back to financing terror via Iran.
It seems to me that Ms. Lance Bottoms would be a more appropriate choice for HHS (or Surgeon General ;-)
..... They forgot to mention Hunter Biden as Secretary of State .....
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