President-elect Joe Biden is moving quickly to fill out his administration and could name top leaders for his Cabinet as early as next week.
Biden told reporters he's already decided on who will lead the Treasury Department. That pick, along with his nominee for secretary of state, may be announced before Thanksgiving. Other senior officials involved in the economy, national security or public health, could be announced in groups, according to people close to the transition who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations.
Such a move is intended to deliver the message that Biden is intent on preparing for the presidency even as President Donald TrumpΒ refuses to concede Β and attempts to subvert the election results in key states.Β
Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren are reportedly at risk of being excluded from the senior ranks of Biden's administration as the incoming president balances the demands of his party's progressive base against the political realities of a narrowly divided Senate.
Still, Biden is adding four Obama administration veterans to his top ranks as he continues to build out his White House team.
Cathy Russell, who was Jill Biden's chief of staff during the Obama administration, will serve as director of the White House Office of Presidential Personnel, evaluating applicants for administration roles. Louisa Terrell, who served as a legislative adviser to the president in the Obama administration and worked as deputy chief of staff for Biden in the Senate, will be director of the White House Office of Legislative Affairs. Carlos Elizondo, who was social secretary for Jill Biden during the Obama administration, will reprise his role and serve as social secretary for the incoming first lady. Mala Adaga will serve as Jill Biden's policy director. Adaga previously worked as a director for higher education and military families at the Biden Foundation. The announcements come just a few days after Biden unveiled his first major round of top White House staff:
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Longtime aide Ron Klain as Biden chief of staff. Jen O'Malley Dillon, to serve as deputy chief of staff. Campaign co-chair Rep. Cedric Richmond as director of the White House Office of Public Engagement. Biden has indicated he plans to make and announce some of his Cabinet picks around Thanksgiving, and he said Thursday he's already made his decision for Treasury Secretary.
Other post-election developments Friday:
Michigan state legislators visited the White House as President Donald Trump makes an extraordinary and possibly futile attempt to block Bidenβs victory in the battleground state and subvert the results of the presidential election. Bidenβs first in-person meeting with the top Democrats in the House and Senate is expected to be private, but the immediate challenges they face are no secret β including COVID-19 relief legislation, vaccine distribution and Senate confirmation of Bidenβs Cabinet picks. Biden turned 78 on Friday. In two months, he'll take the reins of a politically fractured nation facing a public health crisis, high unemployment and a reckoning on racial justice. As he wrestles with those issues, Biden will attempt to accomplish another feat: demonstrate that age is but a number and he's up to the job. Who's in, who's out Here's who could serve in top roles in the Biden administration, followed by those Trump appointees likely to be out of a job in January.
Photos: Here's who could serve in top roles in the Biden administration
Chief of staff: Ron Klain (announced on Nov. 11)
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Klain, a longtime Biden aide who was a top campaign adviser, served as Biden's chief of staff in the Obama White House and was also a senior aide to the President. He previously served as the chief of staff to Vice President Al Gore and Attorney General Janet Reno. Klain was appointed in 2014 by President Barack Obama to serve as the White House Ebola Response Coordinator. In 2000, he was the General Counsel for the Gore Recount Committee. Klain has been a top debate preparation adviser to Biden, Obama, Bill Clinton, Gore, John Kerry and Hillary Clinton.
AP FILE
Senior White House positions
Updated
Nov 12, 2020
Potential candidate:
Rep. Cedric Richmond
Updated
Nov 12, 2020
A co-chair of Biden's transition team and presidential campaign, the Democratic congressman from Louisiana is thought to be under consideration for several roles in the West Wing. Richmond previously served as the chairman of the influential Congressional Black Caucus.
Jonathan Newton/The Washington Post via AP, Pool
Secretary of State
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Some top candidates:
Susan Rice
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Rice served in the Obama administration as UN ambassador and national security adviser. She served in Clinton's administration as the special assistant to the president and senior director for African affairs at the White House, the assistant secretary for the Bureau of African Affairs at the State Department and the director of international organizations and peacekeeping at the National Security Council. Rice was one of a handful of women on Biden's shortlist for a running mate.
Rice at one point was thought to be the clear choice to succeed Hillary Clinton as secretary of state, but in 2012 withdrew her name from consideration to avoid a bitter Senate confirmation battle. Rice was the target of Republican criticism after comments she made on Sunday morning TV shows defending the Obama administration's handling of the September 11, 2012, attacks on the Benghazi consulate that killed Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans.
AP FILE
Antony Blinken
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Blinken served in the Obama administration as the deputy secretary of state, assistant to the president and principal deputy national security adviser. He served as the national security adviser to then-Vice President Biden and deputy assistant to the president during Obama's first term. He has been a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, and the Democratic staff director at the US Senate Committee on Foreign Relations.
During the Clinton administration, Blinken served as a member of the National Security Council staff at the White House, and held roles as the special assistant to the president, senior director for European affairs, and senior director for speechwriting and then strategic planning. He was Clinton's chief foreign policy speechwriter.
Blinken is also being considered as national security adviser.
AP FILE
Sen. Chris Coons
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Coons currently occupies the same Delaware Senate seat that Biden held for decades. A longtime Biden ally, Coons was one of the first members of Congress to endorse the former vice president when he declared his 2020 presidential candidacy. Coons sits on the following committees in the Senate: Foreign Relations, Appropriations, Judiciary, Small Business & Entrepreneurship and Select Committee on Ethics. Throughout his Senate career, Coons has been known for working across the aisle and forging strong relationships with high-profile Republicans who shared common interests.
AP FILE
Secretary of the Treasury
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Some potential candidates:
Lael Brainard
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Brainard currently serves as a member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. She previously served as the Under Secretary of the US Department of the Treasury and counselor to the secretary of the Treasury during the Obama administration. Brainard was the US representative to the G-20 Finance Deputies and G-7 Deputies and was a member of the Financial Stability Board. During the Clinton administration, Brainard served as the deputy national economic adviser and deputy assistant to the President. She also served as Clinton's personal representative to the G-7/G-8.
If chosen, the Federal Reserve governor would be the first woman to hold the powerful position. Brainard is not quite a consensus pick. Party progressives have other favorites, but neither would her nomination set off the kind of internal ideological war the incoming administration surely wants to avoid.
AP FILE
Sarah Bloom Raskin
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Raskin was the deputy secretary of the US Department of the Treasury during the Obama administration. She was previously a governor of the Federal Reserve Board. Prior to joining the Federal Reserve Board, Raskin was the commissioner of financial regulation for the state of Maryland.
Outside of Sen. Elizabeth Warren, Raskin, a former deputy secretary at the department, would be the top choice for most progressives. That she is less well known to the wider political world could also work in favor.
AP FILE
Sen. Elizabeth Warren
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., speaks during a news conference, Wednesday, Sept. 9, 2020, on Capitol Hill in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
AP FILE
Secretary of Defense
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Some potential candidates:
Michèle Flournoy
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
If chosen and confirmed, Flournoy would be the first female secretary of defense. Flournoy served as the under secretary of defense for policy under Obama. Prior to her confirmation, Flournoy helped lead Obama's transition team at the Defense Department. During the mid-1990's, Flournoy served as principal deputy assistant secretary of defense for strategy and threat reduction, as well as deputy assistant secretary of defense for strategy. She co-founded the Center for a New American Security, a bipartisan think tank, and WestExec Advisors, a strategic advisory firm. Flournoy was a senior advisor at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
AP FILE
Secretary of Homeland Security
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Some potential candidates:
Alejandro Mayorkas
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Mayorkas was deputy secretary of Homeland Security during the Obama administration, and served as the director of the Department of Homeland Security's United States Citizenship and Immigration Services. While at USCIS, Mayorkas oversaw the implementation of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which was an executive action under Obama that protected young undocumented immigrants who came to the US as children from deportation. President Donald Trump moved to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program in 2017 and was ultimately blocked by the Supreme Court from doing so.
AP FILE
Lisa Monaco
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Monaco played a critical role in Biden's vice presidential selection committee, and served as Homeland Security and counterterrorism advisor to Obama. Prior to that job, Monaco served as an assistant attorney general for national security at the Department of Justice, and was a chief of staff to then-Director of the FBI Robert S. Mueller III.
AP FILE
Attorney general
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Some potential candidates:
Sen. Doug Jones
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Jones is the junior United States Senator from Alabama. He lost his reelection bid earlier this month to Republican Tommy Tuberville. President Bill Clinton appointed Jones as US Attorney for the Northern District of Alabama, and Jones was the lead prosecutor suing KKK members responsible for the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing. Jones was also involved in the prosecution of Eric Rudolph, whose 1998 attack on a Birmingham abortion clinic killed an off-duty police officer.
AP FILE
Sally Yates
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Yates was fired by Trump from her role as acting attorney general. The stunning move came after CNN and other outlets reported that Yates told Justice Department lawyers not to make legal arguments defending Trump's executive order on immigration and refugees. Trump's executive order, signed in January 2017, barred citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries from entering the United States for the following 90 days, suspended the admission of all refugees for 120 days and indefinitely suspended the Syrian refugee program. The executive order was later blocked by a federal judge, but the Supreme Court ultimately upheld a revised version of the ban.
Yates had been appointed by Obama and was set to serve until Trump's nominee for attorney general was confirmed.
AP FILE
Secretary of the Interior
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Potential candidate:
Rep. Deb Haaland
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Haaland is a congresswoman from New Mexico, and is one of the first Native American women to serve in Congress. Biden has said he wants an administration that looks like the country. Haaland, the vice chair of the House Natural Resources Committee, would be the first Native American Cabinet secretary if she were to get an offer and accept it. Haaland also leads the Subcommittee on National Parks, Forests and Public Lands.
AP FILE
Secretary of Labor
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Some potential candidates:
Sara Nelson
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Nelson is the international president of the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA. She cemented her image as a rising star of the labor movement during a prolonged government shutdown that stretched from December 2018 to January 2019. During the shutdown, Nelson appeared on cable television and used social media to warn of the dangers of not paying airport workers, and called for a general strike at an AFL-CIO gathering in January.
AP FILE
Sen. Bernie Sanders
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Sanders is reaching out to potential supporters in labor to ask for their support as he mounts a campaign for the job. But he is viewed as a long shot and so far has received mix reactions from labor leaders. In his public comments before and after the election, he focused on a 100-day agenda for the Congress. But with Democrats likely needing to win both Georgia runoffs to take control of the Senate, running a powerful agency might have become more appealing.
Sanders told CNN's Wolf Blitzer on Wednesday that if Biden asked him to join his Cabinet as Labor secretary, he would accept the nomination. "If I had a portfolio that allowed me to stand up and fight for working families, would I do it? Yes, I would," Sanders said.
AP FILE
Boston Mayor Marty Walsh
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Walsh is AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka's pick for the job, a big endorsement in what could soon turn into a contentious debate between moderate Democrats and progressives, who will favor Sen. Bernie Sanders or Michigan Rep. Andy Levin. Walsh grew up in a union family and became a top Boston labor leader before being elected mayor.
AP FILE
Rep. Andy Levin
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Levin is a popular progressive who is also growing his base of support with labor leaders, including at the Communications Workers of America. The United Auto Workers are also likely allies going forward for the Michigan congressman. Like Walsh, Levin has a background as an organizer with major unions. But he also has credibility with climate activists for having helped create Michigan's Green Jobs Initiative.
AP FILE
Health and Human Services Secretary
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Potential candidate:
Vivek Murthy
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Murthy, a doctor of internal medicine, is the co-chair of Biden's coronavirus advisory board. He previously served as the US surgeon general after being nominated by Obama. He resigned in April 2017 at the request of the Trump administration. He was confirmed by the Senate after facing opposition from Senate Republicans for calling to treat gun violence as a public health issue.
AP FILE
Department of Housing and Urban Development Secretary
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Potential candidate:
Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Bottoms is the mayor of Atlanta and is a rising star of the Democratic Party. Bottoms stepped into the national spotlight when she denounced vandalism in her city as "chaos" after demonstrations over the death of George Floyd, a Black man who was killed by police in Minneapolis. Bottoms is a former judge and city council member. She was considered as a potential running mate for Biden.
AP FILE
Secretary of Education
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Potential candidate:
Randi Weingarten
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Weingarten is the president of the American Federation of Teachers, AFL-CIO and has long pushed for education reform. Prior to holding that role, she was the president of the United Federation of Teachers, AFT Local 2. Weingarten served on an education reform commission put together by New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo. She also chaired New York City's Municipal Labor Committee.
AP FILE
Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Potential candidate:
Jay Inslee
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Inslee is the governor of Washington state, and previously served in the US House of Representatives. He was a Democratic presidential candidate in the 2020 election. Inslee is dedicated to addressing climate change and other environmental issues, and made the environment the central focus of his 2020 presidential bid. While in the US House of Representatives, he served on the House Committee on Energy and Commerce and on the House Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming.
AP FILE
UN ambassador
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Potential candidate:
Pete Buttigieg
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Buttigieg is the former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, and a former 2020 Democratic presidential candidate. Buttigieg's presidential bid was historic -- he was the first out gay man to launch a competitive campaign for president, and he broke barriers by becoming the first gay candidate to earn primary delegates for a major party's presidential nomination.
AP FILE
These Trump administration figures will soon be jobless
The end of Trump's White House
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Hereβs a look at some of the high- and not-so-high profile politicos who will be out of a job come Jan. 20, when President-elect Joe Biden takes office.
ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP
William Barr
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Perhaps no Trump official enraged Democrats more than Trumpβs last attorney general pick, William Barr. Shortly after assuming the post in February 2019, he took over control of all Justice Department investigations, most notably the Mueller probe of Russian interference in the 2016 election. In a press conference for the history books, Barr declared what Special Counsel Robert Mueller had been unwilling to state β that there was no evidence of obstruction of justice by Trump or his allies during the nearly three-year-long probe. Barr also raised hackles for championing social issues outside the typical purview of an attorney general, railing against βmilitant secularistsβ in a 2019 speech at the University of Notre Dame law school.
CHIP SOMODEVILLA/AFP
Ben Carson
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
When Trump first aired the idea of appointing Ben Carson as secretary of Housing and Urban Development, the neurosurgeon-turned-political candidate reportedly thought he had no business running the federal agency in charge of housing policy. Once he accepted the job, though, he was embroiled in controversies including spending $31,000 in taxpayer money on a dining room for his office. He was ultimately cleared of wrongdoing for that. Critics fault him for falling short on promises to fix low-income housing, presiding instead over an increase in HUD units that fail health and safety inspections.
Drew Angerer
Betsy DeVos
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Americans got to know Education Secretary Betsy DeVos in a 2018 interview on β60 Minutes,β and many thought she didnβt pass the test. She pleaded ignorance on issues like public schools in her home state of Michigan, infamously stating, βI have not intentionally visited schools that are underperforming.β The wife of former Amway CEO Dick DeVos and sister of the founder of the controversial security firm formerly known as Blackwater, she was blasted for suspending investigations into for-profit colleges early in the administration. Trump was rumored to be considering her removal in the event of his re-election.
Yuri Gripas
Stephen Miller
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Senior adviser Stephen Miller was considered the architect of Trumpβs hardline policies on immigration. He seemed bent on doing everything possible to keep immigrants out of the country, from embracing a wall along the border with Mexico to using COVID as an apparent pretext to halt entry into the U.S. Miller urged other members of the administration to back one of the most hated policies of the Trump White House, the βzero toleranceβ approach of separating children from undocumented immigrant parents. βIf we donβt enforce this, it is the end of our country as we know it,β he reportedly said in May 2018.
Olivier Douliery
Paula White
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
For non-Trump supporters, one of the most baffling aspects of the administration was the presidentβs appeal to evangelical Christians. Analysts have pointed to Trumpβs appointment of conservative judges, support of Israel and sociological changes in American churches as reasons for the fervent support. But his choice of personal pastor may also say it all. Paula White preached a version of Christianity known as the βprosperity gospelβ and railed against LGBT rights and abortion. She recently appeared to pray for the 2020 election to be overturned, saying, βWe stop and we override the will of man for the will of God.β
Chip Somodevilla
Louis DeJoy
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
Trumpβs appointment of a new postmaster general as Americans readied to mail in an unprecedented number of ballots drew heavy criticism over the summer. Louis DeJoy came from the private sector, where he ran a national logistics company, and got in Trumpβs good graces through huge campaign contributions. The U.S. Postal Service reportedly slowed its processing of ballots in the weeks before the election, and many forms reached voters late. There are now calls to investigate the postmaster generalβs not-so-joyous handling of the election.
TOM BRENNER/AFP
Ivanka Trump
Updated
Nov 20, 2020
While dogged by allegations of nepotism the past four years, Trump had no problem giving daughter Ivanka Trump, son-in-law Jared Kushner and sons Donald Jr. and Eric and their partners high-profile roles in his administration and campaign. Ivanka Trumpβs pre-White House efforts to advocate for women seemed to make her the object of special scorn to liberals. Many said she was, in the words of a famous βSaturday Night Liveβ skit, βcomplicitβ in what they viewed as a war on womenβs rights. How the family of socialites will fare in a post-Trump New York City β where residents literally danced in the streets upon learning of his defeat β remains to be seen.
Stephen M. Dowell