Washington:President-elect Joe Biden is facing increasing pressure to expand the racial and ideological diversity in his choices for Cabinet and other top jobs. A month and a half before he takes office, he’s drawing rebukes from activists who fear he’ll fall short on promises to build an administration that looks like the country it governs.
But civil rights leaders are grumbling that none of the “big four” Cabinet positions – the secretaries of state, defence and treasury and the attorney general – has yet gone to a person of colour. And Biden is declining to commit to doing so.
“I promise you, it’ll be the single most diverse Cabinet based on race, colour, based on gender that’s ever existed in the United States of America,” the president-elect said instead during a news conference Friday.
That came after Congressional Hispanic Democrats expressed dismay during a call with Klain and other Biden advisers on Thursday about the treatment of New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, who reportedly removed her name from consideration to be the new administration’s interior secretary. They urged that she remain a candidate to head the more prominent Department of Health and Human Services, but it’s not clear she will.
“I do think there needs to be a little more focus on the progressive wing of the party as well as African Americans,” Martin Luther King III, the son of the slain civil rights leader, said in a phone interview Friday. “But you can’t assume that that’s not going to be addressed.”
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Biden already faces tough Senate fights to get some of his keys picks confirmed by Republicans, and discontent among his supporters over his commitment to diversity could prove especially problematic. He’s urging bipartisanship but could find himself in a situation similar to Obama, who took office in 2009 talking of moving past political scuffling but underestimated strong pushback in Congress.
Today’s Senate is more bare-knuckled and hyper-partisan than when Biden was vice president, including GOP senators eyeing their own 2024 White House runs. But initial meetings between nominees and senators seem to be going well.
“While we fully expected disagreement with some members of the Senate, we’re gratified by the overwhelming reaction and strong bipartisan acclaim that our nominees have received overall,” says transition spokesman Sean Savett.
During his decades in the Senate and even while serving as Obama’s vice president, Biden relied on a small group of close advisers who were largely white. And so far after the election, he has again proven likely to choose people he’s most comfortable with for key posts.
In addition to the race, another point of contention could come from the progressive wing of the Democratic Party. Many activists cheered Biden’s pick for treasury secretary of Janet Yellen, an advocate for policies designed to improve the lives of the working class. But they have otherwise expressed concern that Biden will make major staffing picks who won’t push hard enough for significant reforms across a variety of policy areas.
Maurice Mitchell, national director of the Working Families Party advocacy group, said he understands Biden will want trusted advisers, meaning he could lean on people who have long been close to him. But he said that coping with such large challenges as the coronavirus pandemic and an economy in distress while combating economic inequality and institutional racism will require looking beyond “people who have been involved, in some ways, in some of the decisions over 40 years that got us here.”
“The Biden administration needs to choose people who have demonstrated that they are visionaries, are tough fighters who have a large-scale approach of how to use the machinery of the federal government to fight for working people,” Mitchell said. “This is not the time for moderation and gradualism.”