Progressives push for key posts in Biden administration, lay out policy goals

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(FILES) In this file photo taken on October 8, 2020 Democratic presidential candidate former US Vice President Joe Biden pauses while speaking to supporters in front of an Arizona state flag, at the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America's training center in Phoenix, Arizona. - Joe Biden has won the state of Arizona, US networks said late Thursday November 11, further cementing his lead in the Electoral College and flipping the state Democratic for the first time since 1996. Arizona gives Biden a 290-217 lead over Trump in the Electoral College that ultimately decides the presidency, with 270 needed to win the White House. (Photo by Brendan Smialowski / AFP)

Leading progressives are pressuring US President-elect Joe Biden to embrace their policy agenda even as more centrist Democrats argue such proposals prevented the party from retaking full control of Congress.

For now, much of the lobbying centers on who Biden should — or should not — appoint to key posts as he builds out the administration that will take office in January.

The left-wing think tank Progressive Change Institute partnered with more than 40 activist groups. On Friday it released a detailed list of 400 progressive policy experts they want Biden to bring on. That follows a separate effort from more than half a dozen progressive groups this week that signed letters urging the president-elect against naming anyone with ties to major corporate interests to key Cabinet posts.

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The jockeying amounts to the opening round of what is likely to be a lengthy debate over the future of the Democratic Party. Some centrists have blamed losses in the House and a disappointing performance in the Senate on Democrats as having moved too far to the left.

That’s creating tension for a party that should be basking in the glow of defeating an incumbent president for the first time in nearly 30 years.

In this file photo taken on November 13, 2014 US Vice President Joseph Biden (R) joined by Ebola Response Coordinator Ron Klain (L), speaks during a meeting regarding Ebola at the Eisenhower Executive office building in Washington, DC. (MARK WILSON / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / AFP)

“We’re a big family. There’s lots of different parts to the family,” said Mitch Landrieu, the former Democratic mayor of New Orleans who has a reputation as a political centrist. “It’s a welcome discussion because the country is changing dramatically, and we have to think of how to navigate into the future.”

Much of the focus will be on how Biden fills out his administration. In a letter earlier this week, top progressive groups asked Biden to “decline to nominate or hire corporate executives, lobbyists, and prominent corporate consultants to serve in high office.”

They also said he should aggressively make appointments while Congress is not in session and employ the Vacancy Act, a 1998 law that allows for appointments to administration positions for more than 200 days without Senate approval.

Doing either would keep Senate Republicans from blocking Biden’s top choices — especially the most progressive ones whose nominations would face the toughest confirmation fights. Additionally, the groups sent a similar letter to Senate Democrats instructing them to hold Biden accountable to those demands.

Biden has promised to expand Obama administration ethics rules curbing lobbyist and corporate interests in government. This would be a stark departure from the Trump administration’s friendly relationship with large businesses. But he’s also leaning on advisers with deep Washington experience and calling for bipartisanship and “healing” a divided nation — meaning his new administration could drift naturally toward the middle, steered there by his top choices for top positions.

Biden won the presidency by refusing to embrace his party’s most liberal causes, government-funded health care under “Medicare for All” and the Green New Deal, a collection of proposals to drastically remake the economy to combat climate change. He moved to the left amid the coronavirus outbreak, though, and is now promising to revive the economy once the pandemic subsides by spending $2 trillion to create green jobs and prioritize infrastructure improvements that reduce emissions and work to curb climate change.

“We’re assuming that he wants to implement the agenda that he campaigned on and for that he will need folks in his administration who have that commitment to getting things done for the public good,” said Stephanie Taylor, co-founder of the Progressive Change Institute. “If he has corporate lobbyists in his administration, it would derail his agenda.”

Lauren Maunus, legislative and advocacy manager for the Sunrise Movement — a youth, activist organization that promotes the Green New Deal — claims Biden bested Trump by “embracing a Rooseveltian vision” that includes the most ambitious environmental plan in US history.

Maunus, whose group helped compile the list of 400 experts it recommends for the Biden administration and, separately, signed the letters to Biden and Senate Democrats, said it wasn’t simply a matter of policy debate within the Democratic Party. Instead it was a case where many corporate and fossil fuel interests are trying to seize the mantle of political centrists to protect their financial interests.

“He won on this promise of being a climate president,” Maunus said of Biden. “We think it’s both popular and politically advantageous to lean into this role.”

Segel of Demand Progress noted that Biden failed to win Florida even as its voters approved gradually increasing the state’s minimum wage to $15 an hour. He argued that Biden might have fared better there if he had more fully embraced progressive ideals.

The policy clashes will begin to take more defined shape as Biden makes more choices for his new administration. So far, he’s made only one major one, tapping his longtime adviser Ron Klain as his chief of staff. Klain served as czar to the Obama administration’s response to the 2014 Ebola outbreak in the US. Moderate and progressive Democrats alike cheered this pick.

Other picks almost certainly won’t go as smoothly. But Landrieu said Biden, with his decades of experience in government, is in the position to listen to all of the perspectives, then choose how best to move the party forward.

“I think that he will find a way to help navigate what we now call tension between progressives who say, ‘I want to go further,’ and moderates who are saying, ‘I’ll go as far as I can go, but there’s limits and really what should we even be thinking about,’” Landrieu said. “Everybody’s got a role, and the president’s role is to decide.”

(Times of Israel).

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