Pressure mounts on Biden to make diverse picks for top posts
WASHINGTON — President-elect Joe Biden is facing increasing pressure to expand the racial and ideological diversity in his choices for Cabinet and other top jobs. A month and a half before he takes office, he’s drawing rebukes from activists who fear he’ll fall short on promises to build an administration that looks like the country it governs.
Of the nine major picks Biden has made so far, only two — Secretary of State choice Antony Blinken and chief of staff Ron Klain — are white men. That’s a historic low that so far outpaces the historically diverse Cabinet that Barack Obama assembled in 2009.
But civil rights leaders are grumbling that none of the “big four” Cabinet positions – the secretaries of state, defence and treasury and the attorney general – has yet gone to a person of colour. And Biden is declining to commit to doing so.
“I promise you, it’ll be the single most diverse Cabinet based on race, colour, based on gender that’s ever existed in the United States of America,” the president-elect said instead during a news conference Friday.