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CaliforniaPeggy

(156,619 posts)
Sun Aug 23, 2020, 11:31 AM Aug 2020

The Washington Post's Picks for Biden's Cabinet:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/08/21/biden-picked-his-vp-now-we-pick-his-dream-cabinet/?utm_campaign=wp_week_in_ideas&utm_medium=email&utm_source=newsletter&wpisrc=nl_ideas

It's a great list!




(Tom Toles/The Washington Post)
Opinion by The Ranking Committee
August 21, 2020 at 6:04 a.m. PDT
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With presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden’s veep picked, convention concluded and campaign cruising ahead of his opponent’s, he might be tempted to start measuring the White House drapes. So to curb that temptation, the Ranking Committee members are doing it for him for Round 69 — starting with whom he should pick for his Cabinet.

— Drew Goins
Chief of Staff Susan Rice

Rice would obviously be a great secretary of state as well, but the Biden-Harris administration will immediately confront so many problems on so many fronts that it will be vital to have a take-charge chief of staff who can set priorities and make things happen. Rice has the needed close relationship with Biden, and she takes no mess from anyone. Imagine the woe to befall any poor staffer who came to a meeting unprepared.

— Eugene Robinson
Secretary of State Chris Coons

This Republican would rest easier if Sen. Coons was at the helm of the State Department in his friend Joe Biden’s administration. The Delaware Democrat is clear-eyed about China and has a record of advocacy for straight talk about China’s Communist Party that few Democrats can match.

— Hugh Hewitt
Special Envoy Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Pete Buttigieg

Buttigieg should be tapped for a top State role — managing the rebuilding of U.S. international leadership and alliances with a focus on the coronavirus. Buttigieg speaks a gazillion languages. He’d be apt at communicating to his fellow millennials the virtues of restoring U.S. global leadership on 21st-century challenges such as the need for better global health infrastructure. They might justifiably be suspicious that such leadership can accomplish much good in the world, but Buttigieg likes nothing more than persuading people into optimism with that technocratic flair of his.

— Greg Sargent
Treasury Secretary Gina Raimondo

The governor of Rhode Island is arguably the most effective executive in politics today and certainly the one with the most guts. She has taken on hard problems, such as underfunded pensions and rampant coronavirus. She’s a veteran of Wall Street who can talk the language of the financial industry, but she’s not its slave or its tool. She’ll be ready to mop up the damage done during the Shutdown Crash. Then again, she might be the only person ready to master the mess known as the Department of Homeland Security.

— David Von Drehle
… or DHS Secretary Gina Raimondo and Treasury Secretary Andrew Cuomo

Biden needs someone at Treasury who can mediate between the different wings of the Democratic Party while maintaining the confidence of the markets. Who better to do that than the governor from Wall Street himself?

— Henry Olsen
Defense Secretary Michèle Flournoy

One of the leading defense intellectuals of her generation, Flournoy is also a seasoned veteran at the Pentagon, having served under President Barack Obama as undersecretary for policy. She can take the world’s toughest bureaucracy and point it toward a dangerous — but different — future. And 100 years after suffrage, it’s time to have a female defense secretary; I’d love to see a majority-female Cabinet.

— David Von Drehle
Attorney General Sally Yates

A courageous civil servant who has demonstrated her commitment to upholding the law even under personally and politically difficult conditions.

— Catherine Rampell
Commerce Secretary Erica Groshen … or another protector of stats

Don’t let the name of the department fool you; arguably Commerce’s most important function is overseeing most of the federal government’s major independent statistical agencies. This job may be especially hard next year, given attempted sabotage of the census. I’d appoint Groshen (former Bureau of Labor Statistics commissioner and fierce defender of statistical agency independence) — or if not her, perhaps Julia Lane (NYU economist who just wrote a book about democratizing public data), Katherine Wallman (former chief statistician of the United States) or someone else with a demonstrated commitment to safeguarding and upgrading government statistics, which have been under assault for the past three-plus years.

— Catherine Rampell
Labor Secretary Sara Nelson

Nelson, president of the Association of Flight Attendants union, would be an olive branch to organized labor and the progressive wing of the party. The labor movement’s rising star doesn’t hold public office — which was a disadvantage as a long-shot name in the veepstakes, but an advantage in a year when Biden wants avoid taking too many members of Congress away from their seats.

— David Byler

Sign up for The Odds newsletter for election updates from data columnist David Byler
Health and Human Services Secretary Mitt Romney

After all, as Democrats keep telling us, Obamacare was really his idea — and it would be a meaningful gesture across the aisle in an era when such things are badly needed.

— Megan McArdle
Housing and Urban Development Secretary Cory Booker

His campaign stump speech would always begin with the story of how his life was changed by strangers who fought against housing discrimination so that his parents could buy their dream house and give him a future. And who has better experience than the former mayor of Newark?

— Karen Tumulty
Energy Secretary Mitch Landrieu

A Louisiana politician who understands both the offshore oil and gas industry and the environmental risks it poses, Landrieu would be a Democratic voice from the Gulf Coast in an administration that probably won’t have many others. His stand on Confederate monuments in New Orleans was bold and deserves recognition, too.

— Charles Lane
Veterans Affairs Secretary Michelle Howard

The highest-ranking woman and African American in U.S. Navy history, Adm. Howard retired in 2017 with four stars and experience both in Washington, as the Navy’s second-in-command at the Pentagon, and abroad, as commander of U.S. naval forces in Europe and Africa. She might not want this notoriously thankless job, but America’s veterans would be lucky to have her.

— David Von Drehle
Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Jay Inslee

He ran his campaign on a single issue. That issue is now the single most important, and conveniently for the country, there’s an expert on what to do about it ready to serve. Inslee put climate change front and center in the primary. He could make sure it stays there in the presidency.

— Molly Roberts
Director of National Intelligence Adam Schiff

The California congressman, who chairs the House Intelligence Committee and served as a House impeachment manager, would be a fine pick for DNI. Among the many tasks the next chief will face is repairing trust between Congress and the intelligence community. And of course, no one is more familiar with the Trump era’s partisan perversion of intelligence than Schiff is.

— Jennifer Rubin
CIA Director Drew Gilpin Faust

The first female president of Harvard University is the 21st-century equivalent of the so-called Wise Men of the mid-20th century, the sage leaders whose independent stature gave them the freedom to be honest and whose stock in trade was good judgment. She would bring a much-needed gravitas to the battered intelligence community.

— David Von Drehle
Bonus Yang!

I want Andrew Yang to have some job that puts him at the forefront of the administration’s thinking on technology, the economy and the future. He has a creative, counterintuitive mind and a voice that should continue to be heard.

— Karen Tumulty
42 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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The Washington Post's Picks for Biden's Cabinet: (Original Post) CaliforniaPeggy Aug 2020 OP
Since it's behind a paywall, can you paste it here? Fiendish Thingy Aug 2020 #1
Of course! Sorry, I'd forgotten about the damn paywall. CaliforniaPeggy Aug 2020 #3
Cart before horse and I will not pay to see it. Sneederbunk Aug 2020 #2
If they win back the senate Kamala4TheWin Aug 2020 #4
Perhaps Hilary Clinton could be considered for Chainfire Aug 2020 #5
Some interesting picks, a couple of Quibbles Fiendish Thingy Aug 2020 #6
Elizabeth Warren is the smartest person in the room about economic/legal issues. BComplex Aug 2020 #7
That's why I want her as Senate Majority Leader Fiendish Thingy Aug 2020 #8
I agree, but I don't think Schumer is going to go for that. BComplex Aug 2020 #9
Don't care - she should challenge him regardless nt Fiendish Thingy Aug 2020 #11
She won't. No one will. Schumer will become majority leader tritsofme Aug 2020 #18
The Senate Majority Leader is elected by the members of his caucus. hedda_foil Aug 2020 #14
Worth a try - new Senate convenes Jan 3, two weeks before inauguration nt Fiendish Thingy Aug 2020 #15
Love BOTH of those!!! MyOwnPeace Aug 2020 #12
Megan McArdle can take a flying leap JHB Aug 2020 #10
Education Secretary??? lamp_shade Aug 2020 #13
We need Inslee to stay in WA. Otherwise not bad. nolabear Aug 2020 #16
Without knowing what Gina Raimondo's ambitions might be, Totally Tunsie Aug 2020 #17
I posted my own comment on that article DFW Aug 2020 #19
Thank you for that moment of sanity ! OnDoutside Aug 2020 #21
I fear you and I are in the minority DFW Aug 2020 #23
Well don't stop ! ;) OnDoutside Aug 2020 #25
Not for a while, anyway! DFW Aug 2020 #27
I agree with much of what you said PatSeg Aug 2020 #30
I found the list so far from ideal DFW Aug 2020 #34
It definitely was provocative PatSeg Aug 2020 #36
That is probably because Trump would recommend his own cabinet DFW Aug 2020 #37
I really wish people would stop suggesting Democratic Senators and Representatives for cabinet jobs. GoCubsGo Aug 2020 #20
Consider, please: Stinky The Clown Aug 2020 #38
I had considered that. GoCubsGo Aug 2020 #40
Who are your specific concern with respect to the narrow issue of removing a serving incumbent Stinky The Clown Aug 2020 #41
Some really good stuff here Stinky The Clown Aug 2020 #22
See if HRC wants to be SoS again. lpbk2713 Aug 2020 #24
Vlad would do his nut, which would be nice. OnDoutside Aug 2020 #26
Hi Peggy! mvd Aug 2020 #28
YW! And I agree in general. CaliforniaPeggy Aug 2020 #29
Yep I gave you a rec mvd Aug 2020 #31
Aw, thanks! I really appreciate the recs. *smooch* CaliforniaPeggy Aug 2020 #33
Thanks for posting! PatSeg Aug 2020 #32
Ron Klain will be Biden's chief of staff DeminPennswoods Aug 2020 #35
Peggy, this is a Dream Team -- it really made me smile... Hekate Aug 2020 #39
Romney? WTF? There is no qualified Democrat for HHS? dalton99a Aug 2020 #42
 

Kamala4TheWin

(55 posts)
4. If they win back the senate
Sun Aug 23, 2020, 12:07 PM
Aug 2020

and they can spare the seat, Warren should be Secretary of Education and Yang the Commerce Secretary.

I also want a position for Beto...maybe Press Secretary

Fiendish Thingy

(23,200 posts)
6. Some interesting picks, a couple of Quibbles
Sun Aug 23, 2020, 12:09 PM
Aug 2020

Although Adam Schiff would be fantastic as Director of National Intelligence, I’d prefer to see him take over as speaker of the house when Pelosi steps down in 2022 (which she announced when she was re-elected as speaker after the 2018 blue wave).

That, and Warren as Senate Majority Leader. (Seniority be damned) Warren would be far more effective than anyone else I can think of in shepherding legislation through the senate to Biden’s desk without it being watered down to the point of meaninglessness.

BComplex

(9,912 posts)
7. Elizabeth Warren is the smartest person in the room about economic/legal issues.
Sun Aug 23, 2020, 12:36 PM
Aug 2020

She should have been president. She needs an office where she can make big changes before another nazi steps in an ruins the country for once and for all.

Fiendish Thingy

(23,200 posts)
8. That's why I want her as Senate Majority Leader
Sun Aug 23, 2020, 12:43 PM
Aug 2020

A cabinet member can help shape policy, which can change with the next administration.

The Majority Leader guides and crafts Laws, which endure. Warren would ensure that no Third Way, Neoliberal BS would make it to Biden’s desk.

Right now, as we speak, Trump’s Labor Secretary, Scalia’s son, is deregulating the financial advisor industry, loosening rules that advisors must act in client’s best interests, as well as loosening rules about the riskiness of funds allowed in 401k’s.

Warren could guide legislation to protect against this type of corruption.

tritsofme

(19,898 posts)
18. She won't. No one will. Schumer will become majority leader
Sun Aug 23, 2020, 04:24 PM
Aug 2020

It’s pretty silly to think he would face a coup, let alone a successful one, after restoring a Democratic majority for the first time in six years.

hedda_foil

(16,985 posts)
14. The Senate Majority Leader is elected by the members of his caucus.
Sun Aug 23, 2020, 02:49 PM
Aug 2020

I adore Elizabeth Warren, and think she should be Treasury Secretary, but it's unlikely that centrist members of the Senate Democratic caucus would go for her as Leader.

MyOwnPeace

(17,549 posts)
12. Love BOTH of those!!!
Sun Aug 23, 2020, 01:15 PM
Aug 2020

It will be important to have strong leadership in both House and Senate if we are to get things back on line. I could think of a couple of Cabinet positions in which both Warren and Schiff would benefit our country and Joe's team, but the BEST must be where they are!

JHB

(38,207 posts)
10. Megan McArdle can take a flying leap
Sun Aug 23, 2020, 12:59 PM
Aug 2020

HHS, like the entire rest of the federal government during this Republican administration, needs a thorough assessment of how its functions have been damaged through Republican neglect and outright sabotage. Would Romney be diligent in carrying out that job?

Totally Tunsie

(11,850 posts)
17. Without knowing what Gina Raimondo's ambitions might be,
Sun Aug 23, 2020, 04:13 PM
Aug 2020

I'd hate to see our Governor moving on to Washington. Our little state needs her still.

DFW

(60,170 posts)
19. I posted my own comment on that article
Sun Aug 23, 2020, 04:41 PM
Aug 2020

(To the Washington Post: )

From your "suggestions," either you posted such awful ones for about half of the postings that one can only surmise you wanted to provoke counter-suggestions, or you asked the RNC to do all the work. You actually asked Hugh Hewitt and Henry Olsen? Who do they suggest for Intelligence czar? Alexander Lukashenko?

Pete Buttigieg for some nothing non-existent post because he speaks "a gazillion languages?" He speak seven, including the dubiously useful Maltese and Darí. So what? I speak nine, and they are all of languages of either allies (German, French, Spanish, Dutch and Italian, e.g.) or important adversaries (Russian). Plus I speak oddball languages like Swedish and Catalan, which have their uses on occasion. I could help mediate the separatist movement in northeastern Spain! Whoopeee! Seriously, Mayor Pete deserves better, and less focus on his peripheral talents. State, Defense, HUD.

And will someone FINALLY please get us Howard Dean for HHS Secretary while his batteries are still fully charged? This is already 12 years overdue. Rahm Emmanuel's grudge has deprived us of Howard's talents long enough.

Oh, and by the way please Cory Booker for Senator from New Jersey, period. The guy jumped in vocally with the "get Al Franken" crowd when the Republicans invented their scam. Not even a hint of a public apology. Instead: Al Franken for anything that Cory Booker might be suggested for, because he not only deserves it more, but would probably be far better at it.

And finally: Susan Rice for White House COS and Jay Inslee for EPA? Well, bravo, the stopped clock is indeed spot on correct twice a day.

DFW

(60,170 posts)
23. I fear you and I are in the minority
Sun Aug 23, 2020, 05:20 PM
Aug 2020

But at least I still get to speak out. There's that.

PatSeg

(53,211 posts)
30. I agree with much of what you said
Sun Aug 23, 2020, 05:39 PM
Aug 2020

especially the part about Howard Dean who served the Democratic party so well as DNC chair and was treated so poorly afterward.

I liked Sally Yates for Attorney General. I don't like the idea of taking Adam Schiff out of congress, he is a powerful voice and I see him as eventually becoming Speaker.

And why would Chris Coons want to be Secretary of State? We don't need to take a Democrat out of the senate, unless we can be absolutely sure a Democrat will replace him. And why do we care what Hugh Hewitt thinks about a Biden cabinet? Actually why did The Washington Post even think to include him?

Overall, I wasn't terribly impressed with the list, but it will be interesting to see how close it is to reality.

DFW

(60,170 posts)
34. I found the list so far from ideal
Sun Aug 23, 2020, 05:46 PM
Aug 2020

I speculated flat out in my comment that I thought they just posted all that for no other reason than to provoke responses to the contrary. Even some Republicans realize what worthless right wing extremists Hewitt and Olsen are. No purpose whatsoever is served by asking them their opinion on anything more controversial than the weather.

PatSeg

(53,211 posts)
36. It definitely was provocative
Sun Aug 23, 2020, 06:07 PM
Aug 2020

which is evident by the comments here, so if that was their intent, it worked. I'm surprised they didn't ask Donald Trump's opinion.

DFW

(60,170 posts)
37. That is probably because Trump would recommend his own cabinet
Sun Aug 23, 2020, 06:09 PM
Aug 2020

At least those whose names he recognizes--should be at least a third of them.

GoCubsGo

(34,899 posts)
20. I really wish people would stop suggesting Democratic Senators and Representatives for cabinet jobs.
Sun Aug 23, 2020, 05:03 PM
Aug 2020

The bench is plenty deep without taking away good people from Congress.

Stinky The Clown

(68,952 posts)
38. Consider, please:
Sun Aug 23, 2020, 10:59 PM
Aug 2020

— Drew Goins
Chief of Staff Susan Rice
Not a current office holder, so no sweat.

— Eugene Robinson
Secretary of State Chris Coons
I suspect DE would replace him with another Democrat.

— Hugh Hewitt
Special Envoy Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Pete Buttigieg
Not a current office holder, so once again, no sweat

— Greg Sargent
Treasury Secretary Gina Raimondo
Her Lt Governor is also a Democrat

— David Von Drehle
… or DHS Secretary Gina Raimondo and Treasury Secretary Andrew Cuomo
Cuomo's Lt Governor is Democrat Kathy Hochul, who has also served in Congress.

— Henry Olsen
Defense Secretary Michèle Flournoy
Another great suggestion and yet again, not a current office holder

— David Von Drehle
Attorney General Sally Yates
Not an incumbent office holder and a GREAT choice!

— Catherine Rampell
Commerce Secretary Erica Groshen … or another protector of stats
And an another non-incumbent

— Catherine Rampell
Labor Secretary Sara Nelson
Ooo Ooo Ooo another non incumbent. And wicked good choice!

— David Byler
Health and Human Services Secretary Mitt Romney
Now that's a seat we can take from an incumbent. Ha!

— Megan McArdle
Housing and Urban Development Secretary Cory Booker
Its New Jersey! I should think it isn't a worry.

— Karen Tumulty
Energy Secretary Mitch Landrieu
Once again, no loss of an incumbent

— Charles Lane
Veterans Affairs Secretary Michelle Howard
Well well, a retired 4 star black woman. If she's smart, she won't take it. If she's about service, she will. I suspect she would.

— David Von Drehle
Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Jay Inslee
Democrat Lt Governor Cyrus Habib would replace him.

— Molly Roberts
Director of National Intelligence Adam Schiff
Its California. No worries.

— Jennifer Rubin
CIA Director Drew Gilpin Faust
And ANOTHER non officeholder.

Stinky The Clown

(68,952 posts)
41. Who are your specific concern with respect to the narrow issue of removing a serving incumbent
Mon Aug 24, 2020, 09:50 AM
Aug 2020

If you don’t like the person for other reasons I don’t care. Just your post’s stated concern.

lpbk2713

(43,273 posts)
24. See if HRC wants to be SoS again.
Sun Aug 23, 2020, 05:21 PM
Aug 2020



There will be a hell of a lot of fence mending to be done
and she would be ideal for the job if she wants it.

mvd

(65,911 posts)
28. Hi Peggy!
Sun Aug 23, 2020, 05:26 PM
Aug 2020

Thanks for posting the picks. It is a fair list. We don’t need a Republican, especially in charge of health! And the list is a bit centrist wing heavy. I do like Inslee and there has been no one more vocal about climate change.

CaliforniaPeggy

(156,619 posts)
29. YW! And I agree in general.
Sun Aug 23, 2020, 05:36 PM
Aug 2020

I think that some of the posters responding are forgetting that I didn't make this list--I just posted it!

I just wanted people to see what ideas are out there circulating.

PatSeg

(53,211 posts)
32. Thanks for posting!
Sun Aug 23, 2020, 05:40 PM
Aug 2020

I knew it came from The Washington Post and appreciate you posting the list.

DeminPennswoods

(17,504 posts)
35. Ron Klain will be Biden's chief of staff
Sun Aug 23, 2020, 05:58 PM
Aug 2020

He filled a similar role when Biden was VP and has known him for 30+ years.

Susan Rice is a lightning rod. I don't think she gets a cabinet post at all. Maybe she ends up as Amb to the UN.

Love Sally Yates for Atty Gen.

Can't see a woman as SecDef yet but could as 1 or more of the CINCs.

Would like to see Robert Reich back at OMB, head of economic advisers or another similar job.

Hekate

(100,133 posts)
39. Peggy, this is a Dream Team -- it really made me smile...
Mon Aug 24, 2020, 02:28 AM
Aug 2020

Fingers crossed we get the chance!

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