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(s)Elections See other (s)Elections Articles Title: Obama Cabinet Is Shy on Southerners, Republicans Obama Cabinet Is Shy on Southerners, Republicans (Update1) Email | Print | A A A By Hans Nichols and Julianna Goldman Dec. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Barack Obama has moved faster than any modern president-elect in selecting his Cabinet, scouring Wall Street, academia and the Senate to assemble a diverse team that has won bipartisan praise. He has every basic entity within his government, said U.S. Representative David Scott, a Georgia Democrat. Hes got Jewish people, hes got Protestants, hes got white, black, you name it. Republicans including Arizona Senator John McCain, Obamas opponent in the presidential election, also have applauded his choices. Still, the Democrats star-studded roster lacks representatives from two groups: Southerners and the Republicans that he vowed to appoint during the campaign. Forty-two days since winning the presidency, Obama has picked 11 members of his Cabinet and 11 senior White House aides. Thats more than twice the number named by Bill Clinton at this point in his transition to the presidency. It also puts Obama ahead of former Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush, according to the White House Transition Project. The appointment yesterday of Nobel laureate Steven Chu to head the Department of Energy kicked off a week in which Obama plans to fill the remainder of his Cabinet. He also announced Lisa Jackson -- who has largely spent her career in New Jersey, even though she was born in New Orleans -- as his choice to head the Environmental Protection Agency. Interior Secretary Democratic Senator Ken Salazar of Colorado is Obamas choice to lead the Department of the Interior, three Democrats close to the transition said yesterday. Salazar, 53, a first-term lawmaker, was an environmental lawyer for 11 years and served as the states attorney general. The soon-to-be 44th president made defusing partisan tensions in Washington a centerpiece of his campaign and promised to appoint more than one Republican to his team. So far, he hasnt named a registered member of that party to his Cabinet or White House staff. After Obamas victory, John Podesta, the co-chairman of the transition team, reaffirmed the president-elects campaign intentions, saying Republicans would be spread throughout the administration. Token Member Youll see Republicans again, in his administration, not just a token member in the Cabinet, Podesta said. Obamas decision to ask George W. Bushs defense secretary, Robert Gates, to stay at the Pentagon, comes closest to fulfilling that vow. While Gates isnt registered in any party, he has said he considers himself a Republican. Retired General Jim Jones, Obamas national security adviser, counseled both McCain and Obama during the presidential campaign and hasnt advertised his political leanings. Those two selections have won plaudits from Republicans, including Scott McClellan, a former spokesman for President George W. Bush who is one of a handful of members of that party to have endorsed Obama during the campaign. At the same time, McClellan said he regretted that Obama hadnt reached out further in picking his team. I personally would like to see maybe three members of the Cabinet that are not considered members of the Democratic Party, McClellan said. Former Representative Jim Leach, who headed a group of Republicans for Obama, was less concerned. The Iowa Republican, who represented Obama at recent economic talks at the White House, has been mentioned to fill the post of Agriculture secretary. There are a lot of factors that go into balancing, but the biggest challenge for any president is quality, Leach said. Bush Record Until now, George H.W. Bush was the record holder in modern times for the highest number of Cabinet-level appointments by this point in the transition, said Terry Sullivan, executive director of the White House Transition Project, a nonpartisan group that provides information to transition teams. With Obamas appointment of Arne Duncan as education secretary -- which he will formally announce at a press briefing scheduled for 10:45 a.m. Chicago time today -- the president- elect surpassed Bush, who at this stage in his transition had named 10 members of his Cabinet and nine senior White House aides. Reagan wasnt far behind, having settled on nine members of his Cabinet and five members of his White House staff; Clinton nominated four Cabinet posts and four for his White House staff. Obama has yet to announce his choices to head the Departments of Labor, Transportation, Agriculture and the Central Intelligence Agency, increasing the odds that a Southerner or a Republican will be selected. Colorado Senator The choice of Coloradan Salazar for Interior secretary doesnt make up for the lack of a Republican, said former Senator Lincoln Chafee, a Republican from Rhode Island who supported Obama. Colorado isnt really seen as a Red State at this point, Chafee said. Allan Lichtman, a professor at American University in Washington, said it would be a mistake for Obama to neglect the South. Hed be very much remiss not to name a Southerner, Lichtman said. After all, hes trying to convert the South back to the Democratic Party, and he doesnt want to be accused of snubbing the South. Obamas White House will have at least one public Southern accent. Robert Gibbs, the press secretary, will brief reporters in his native Alabama drawl. 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#1. To: Disgusted (#0)
Who cares? Lincoln and the Republic should have let the south secede. We wouldn't have had the Civil War and the U.S. would have been better off. And as far as Republicans... the Republican party as the party of conservatives melted away when Reagan took office. Since that time it has become the party of atheist Ashkenazim war mongers and Trotskyite communists.
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