From Robert Kuttner, The American Prospect <[email protected]>
Subject Kuttner on TAP: Biden’s Cabinet: The Scorecard So Far
Date December 23, 2020 8:03 PM
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**DECEMBER 23, 2020**

Kuttner on TAP

Biden's Cabinet: The Scorecard So Far

****

As

**Prospect** readers know, we've worked since March to shed light on
appointments to be avoided as well as good ones worth supporting.
Progressives have done better than many of us feared, for three reasons.

One is the sheer power and strategic coherence of the progressive
movement, and its influence on the process.

The second reflects Joe Biden's admirable quest for diversity. The
Black, female, Latino/a, Asian American, and Native American officials
whom he appointed are not just diverse but progressive. The centrists
are the white guys.

The third is that events-the pandemic, the recession-have conspired
to press Biden to be a bolder president than he anticipated.

On the energy and climate front, which also connects to green
investment, progressives won a clean sweep: Debra Haaland at Interior,
Jennifer Granholm at Energy, Michael Regan at EPA. And for education
secretary, Biden has named a terrific former schoolteacher and
progressive state education chief, Miguel Cardona.

Financial appointments have been better than anticipated, with Janet
Yellen running Treasury, and Bharat Ramamurti as deputy director of the
National Economic Council in charge of financial regulation and consumer
protection. Brian Deese, who heads the council, is the best of the ones
who were seriously considered.

As U.S. trade rep, Katherine Tai rejects the corporate trade consensus.
And the Council of Economic Advisers is a progressive clean sweep.

At OMB, Biden's choice is Neera Tanden of the Center for American
Progress, a center-left figure close to Hillary Clinton. She may well
not get confirmed because of personal animus on the part of key
Republican senators, and the backup is likely to be Gene Sperling, among
the most pro-public investment of the Biden team.

We lost a few, but only a few. Bruce Reed, one of the Terrible Twelve
flagged in the

**Prospect**'s Biden Do Not Reappoint list
,
has been named as deputy chief of staff. It could have been worse. Reed
could have been chief of staff or head of OMB. And Tom Vilsack, the
epitome of a corporate ag Democrat, should not have been made secretary
of agriculture.

Still to come are the secretaries of commerce and labor, and attorney
general, as well as heads of key regulatory agencies. For some reason,
Team Biden is enamored of Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo, a former
venture capitalist strongly opposed by the labor movement and
progressives generally. She's said to be front-runner for Commerce,
but the delay suggests a lot of internal contention.

At least four good people are in the running for labor secretary. Biden
himself has just said he is still considering several possibilities for
AG.

Given that Joe Biden, and not Elizabeth Warren or Bernie Sanders, won
this election, it's not a bad lot. Of course, the policies that ensue
will require the same relentless scrutiny and activism by the
progressive community that helped produce this decent Cabinet.

~ ROBERT KUTTNER

Follow Robert Kuttner on Twitter

Robert Kuttner's latest book is
The Stakes: 2020 and the Survival of American Democracy
.

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