America Votes

Biden Builds Cabinet With Foreign Policy And National Security First

President-elect Biden is expected to make more nominations after Thanksgiving.

Biden Builds Cabinet With Foreign Policy And National Security First
AP/ Carolyn Kaster

The transition process is officially underway. President-elect Joe Biden has been given the funds and infrastructure to build his administration, and with that comes Cabinet appointments, focusing first on foreign policy and national security. 

As a candidate, Biden promised to appoint people with experience, and that's what he did, bumping up former Deputy Secretary of State Tony Blinken to the top post at the State Department, as he did with former Deputy Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas. Though the names are unfamiliar to the everyday American, within Washington, they're all pretty well-known, most playing key roles in President Obama's administration.

Biden's nominations signal that he's prioritizing American allyship with the rest of the world and trust in institutions. Many of these officials will also be tasked with rebuilding the departments the Trump administration gutted.

Biden is surrounding himself not only with career officials but ones he knows from the Obama administration or even from his decades as Delaware's senator.

But Biden has also pledged to pick a team that looks like the country. He promised to make his cabinet 50 percent women. Now, he's appointing women to barrier-breaking positions. Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines would be the first woman to run the intelligence community, and likely Treasury Secretary nominee Janet Yellen would also be the first woman in her post. Mayorkas would be the first Latino and immigrant to run DHS. Blinken and Mayorkas are both Jewish. 

But a challenge for the Biden transition team going forward will be progressives who rallied around Biden despite favoring other Democrats. So far, the olive branch is a brand-new position, Special Presidential Envoy for Climate, given to former Secretary of State John Kerry. But activists say it's only the start. They want to see progressives in Senate-confirmed Cabinet positions. 

The transition team is also aiming to fill lower-level positions with a diverse group, asking about sexual orientation, gender, socioeconomic status and underrepresented communities in the initial application.