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Biden unveils top picks with deep Obama administration ties

President-elect Joe Biden speaks onstage at The Queen theater in Wilmington, Del.
President-elect Joe Biden announces his choice for several positions in his administration at The Queen theater in Wilmington, Del., on Friday.
(Susan Walsh / Associated Press)
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President-elect Joe Biden on Friday introduced five top picks for his new administration, drawing on leading names from the Obama White House while also tapping an Ohio congresswoman and a congressional committee veteran.

Appearing at the afternoon event were Susan Rice, Biden’s choice for director of the White House Domestic Policy Council who served as President Obama’s national security advisor and U.N. ambassador; and Denis McDonough, Obama’s White House chief of staff, now nominated as Veterans Affairs secretary.

Also attending were Tom Vilsack, Biden’s selection for Agriculture secretary who held the same post for Obama; Ohio Rep. Marcia Fudge, chosen to be the new administration’s housing chief; and Katherine Tai, who is chief trade counsel for the House Ways and Means Committee and has been tapped as U.S. trade representative.

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“They bring deep experience and bold new thinking,” Biden said. “Above all, they know how government should and can work for all Americans.”

Obama was first elected on promises to move beyond partisan politics, but saw some major policy goals crash in an uncooperative Congress, especially after Republican gains in the 2010 midterms. Some progressive Democrats now worry that Biden is drawing too much from the Obama team, which they feel should have been bolder in its efforts to remake government.

In foreign policy, Joe Biden can’t pick up where he and President Obama left off. He faces heightened tensions, especially with China and Iran.

Mark Riddle, a Democratic strategist who founded a pro-Biden Super PAC during the 2020 presidential campaign, said there is no danger in relying too heavily on “all-star” former Obama administration leaders. But he advised Biden’s team to prioritize controlling the COVID-19 pandemic enough to spur economic growth, rather than having arguments over social policies that might allow congressional Republicans to more easily block sweeping policy initiatives.

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“The success or failure of the administration out of the box is going to be, do they focus on jobs?” Riddle said. “If we come out of the box on jobs, jobs, jobs, I feel great. If we are about a bunch of other, say, progressive ideals, we could be right back where we were.”

Rice, who was once thought to be a finalist to become Biden’s running mate before he settled on Kamala Harris, is set to have wide-ranging sway over the incoming administration’s approach to immigration, healthcare and racial inequality. She worked closely with Biden when he was Obama’s vice president and won’t require Senate confirmation — which could have faced stiff Republican opposition.

McDonough is faced with running a large agency that has presented organizational challenges for both parties over the years. Vilsack, a former Iowa governor, is expected to direct agriculture policy with an eye toward major farming states, similar to what he did for Obama.

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Xavier Becerra is Washington-ready, not a naïve outsider who needs D.C. training wheels, columnist George Skelton writes.

Biden chose Fudge to head the Department of Housing and Urban Development despite the urging of some prominent African American Democrats in Congress who wanted her to be Agriculture secretary — and therefore rethink how the federal government combats hunger issues nationwide.

Those in line to head agencies require Senate approval, as does Tai.

Rice and Fudge are African American and Tai is Asian American, reflecting Biden’s promise to choose a diverse Cabinet that reflects the makeup of the country.

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