Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Michele Flournoy is at the head of the line for Sec Def.
Would love to see Stacey Abrams with something, but not sure what she's qualified for/would want. Amy K and Tammy Duckworth could probably also have something if they want, but they're better off staying put in the Senate. Would love for Amy K to replace Schumer in the leadership. Whitmer could have a post, but makes sense for her to stay put as well.
Mayor Pete for Transportation Sec or UN Ambassador--know he doesn't have traditional credentials for the latter but he's a sharp cookie and, with the right staff, would do well imo. I think Biden would be eager to mentor him.
Lael Braenard or Raphael Bostic for Sec Treasury
Tom Blinken NSA
Eric Garcetti for Labor
Karen Bass for HUD
Sally Yates for AG
Lujan Grisham for HHS (read she's angling for it)
Chris Murphy or William Burns for State
Jay Inslee for Interior
Alejandro Mayorkas for Homeland Security
Whomever Dr. Jill likes for Sec Ed, should be BIPOC
Vilsack for Sec Ag, if he's not too long in the tooth.
Susan Rice needs a non-confirmation slot--she wouldn't make it through the Senate. A caveat for any of these names, if Biden thinks they'd be too hard to get through
There's a whole lot of establishment figures in there. And I know we shouldn't do diversity for the sake of it, but it's not the most diverse crowd of people.
I count 5/6 POC. What would be an appropriate number? Of course establishment, tends to correlate to experience and competence.
I don't dislike anyone on this list but I agree with PP I'd like a more forward-thinking choice for Sec Ag, if there are any good candidates.
Not diverse enough - need more white women as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gretchen Whitmer and Detroit mayor Mike Duggan have to get something. Duggan was one of his earliest supporters and stuck with him even when it looked like he was going to lose the primary. Duggan controls that Detroit and Wayne County Machine that delivered him the state.
Whitmer should stay where she is and then run for Stabenow’s seat in four years. She’s 70.
Whitmer doesn't want to be in Michigan. She wants out ASAP. Her posture over the last 12 months made that very obvious.
Anonymous wrote:Sherrod Brown for Commerce
Anonymous wrote:Alexander Vindman
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Michele Flournoy is at the head of the line for Sec Def.
Would love to see Stacey Abrams with something, but not sure what she's qualified for/would want. Amy K and Tammy Duckworth could probably also have something if they want, but they're better off staying put in the Senate. Would love for Amy K to replace Schumer in the leadership. Whitmer could have a post, but makes sense for her to stay put as well.
Mayor Pete for Transportation Sec or UN Ambassador--know he doesn't have traditional credentials for the latter but he's a sharp cookie and, with the right staff, would do well imo. I think Biden would be eager to mentor him.
Lael Braenard or Raphael Bostic for Sec Treasury
Tom Blinken NSA
Eric Garcetti for Labor
Karen Bass for HUD
Sally Yates for AG
Lujan Grisham for HHS (read she's angling for it)
Chris Murphy or William Burns for State
Jay Inslee for Interior
Alejandro Mayorkas for Homeland Security
Whomever Dr. Jill likes for Sec Ed, should be BIPOC
Vilsack for Sec Ag, if he's not too long in the tooth.
Susan Rice needs a non-confirmation slot--she wouldn't make it through the Senate. A caveat for any of these names, if Biden thinks they'd be too hard to get through
There's a whole lot of establishment figures in there. And I know we shouldn't do diversity for the sake of it, but it's not the most diverse crowd of people.
I count 5/6 POC. What would be an appropriate number? Of course establishment, tends to correlate to experience and competence.
I don't dislike anyone on this list but I agree with PP I'd like a more forward-thinking choice for Sec Ag, if there are any good candidates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Biden fell in love with Mayor Pete during the primary and wanted to adopt him as a surrogate son. And he did a fantastic job on Fox fighting for Biden. I bet there is a place for him.
I like Chief of Staff for Pete.
No. He doesn't have the political experience for that job. However, he would be a fantastic Press Secretary. If you don't believe me, go and look at the videos of his interviews on Fox and tell me that he wouldn't put smarta$$ WH journalists in their place and handle them smoothly when they press for information that he isn't giving out.
I agree he would make a good press secretary but does he really want to be an attack dog against the conservative press and that's it? I feel that it's not prestigious/political/impactful enough of a position for him to just be a talking head...
The mainstream media is constantly parroting right wing talking points. I think he could help reshape that. The American public deserves to actually hear what the Democrats say. I think Pete could do that much more capably than many others. DP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gretchen Whitmer and Detroit mayor Mike Duggan have to get something. Duggan was one of his earliest supporters and stuck with him even when it looked like he was going to lose the primary. Duggan controls that Detroit and Wayne County Machine that delivered him the state.
Whitmer should stay where she is and then run for Stabenow’s seat in four years. She’s 70.
Anonymous wrote:Pete will be Secretary of State or UN Ambassador. He’s overly qualified to be Joe Biden’s press person or calendar boy. He speaks several languages, and he has military service.
Secretary of State; book it.
Anonymous wrote:Sherrod Brown for Commerce
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mayor Pete and Klobuchar - Their primary dropout timing solidified the moderates behind Biden.
Agree on these two but if I were Biden I'd include a couple of moderate republicans with a history of bipartisanship. With a divided house we need an executive branch that can set the tone. Also, the election clearly was a pushback on progressives not only in house seats but on so many state wide ballot issues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mayor Pete and Klobuchar - Their primary dropout timing solidified the moderates behind Biden.
Agree on these two but if I were Biden I'd include a couple of moderate republicans with a history of bipartisanship. With a divided house we need an executive branch that can set the tone. Also, the election clearly was a pushback on progressives not only in house seats but on so many state wide ballot issues.
Agreed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Biden fell in love with Mayor Pete during the primary and wanted to adopt him as a surrogate son. And he did a fantastic job on Fox fighting for Biden. I bet there is a place for him.
I like Chief of Staff for Pete.
No. He doesn't have the political experience for that job. However, he would be a fantastic Press Secretary. If you don't believe me, go and look at the videos of his interviews on Fox and tell me that he wouldn't put smarta$$ WH journalists in their place and handle them smoothly when they press for information that he isn't giving out.