Biden unveils nominees for national security team. Who are they?

President-elect Joe Biden's national security and foreign policy team lineup includes several women and people of color, some of whom would break barriers if confirmed. The nominees are all Washington veterans with ties to the Obama administration.

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Carolyn Kaster/AP
President-elect Joe Biden introduces his nominees and appointees to key national security and foreign policy posts Nov. 24, 2020, in Wilmington, Delaware. Mr. Biden's picks are seen as a clear shift away from Trump-era "America First" policies.

Declaring “America is back,” President-elect Joe Biden introduced his national security team, his first substantive offering of how he’ll shift from Trump-era “America First” policies by relying on experts from the Democratic establishment to be some of his most important advisers.

“Together, these public servants will restore America globally, its global leadership, and its moral leadership,” Mr. Biden said Tuesday from a theater in his longtime home of Wilmington, Delaware. “It’s a team that reflects the fact that America is back, ready to lead the world, not retreat from it.”

The nominees are all Washington veterans with ties to the Obama administration, a sign of Mr. Biden’s effort to resume some form of normalcy after the tumult of President Donald Trump’s four years in office.

There are risks to choosing experienced hands from the previous Democratic administration. Besides Republican attacks, progressives fret that Mr. Biden is tapping some officials who were too cautious and incremental the last time they held power.

Still, Mr. Biden’s nominees were a clear departure from Mr. Trump, whose Cabinet has largely consisted of men, almost all of them white. Mr. Biden’s picks included several women and people of color, some of whom would break barriers if confirmed to their new positions.

On Tuesday they stood behind Mr. Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris, spaced apart and wearing masks to prevent the spread of the coronavirus, a contrast with Mr. Trump and many of his top aides who have largely eschewed facial coverings.

The president-elect’s team includes Antony Blinken, a veteran foreign policy hand well-regarded on Capitol Hill whose ties to Mr. Biden go back some 20 years, for secretary of state; lawyer Alejandro Mayorkas to be homeland security secretary; veteran diplomat Linda Thomas-Greenfield to be the United States ambassador to the United Nations; and Obama White House alumnus Jake Sullivan as national security adviser.

Avril Haines, a former deputy director of the CIA, was picked to serve as director of national intelligence, the first woman to hold that post, and former Secretary of State John Kerry will make a curtain call as a special envoy on climate change. Mr. Kerry and Mr. Sullivan’s position will not require Senate confirmation.

With the Senate’s balance of power hinging on two runoff races in Georgia that will be decided in January, some Senate Republicans have already expressed antipathy to Mr. Biden’s picks as little more than Obama world retreads.

Sen. Tom Cotton, an Arkansas Republican and potential 2024 presidential candidate, argued that Mr. Biden is surrounding himself with people who will go soft on China.

Sen. Marco Rubio, another potential White House hopeful, who sits on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that will consider Mr. Blinken’s nomination, broadly wrote off the early selections.

“Biden’s cabinet picks went to Ivy League schools, have strong resumes, attend all the right conferences & will be polite & orderly caretakers of America’s decline,” Mr. Rubio tweeted.

Mr. Biden said his choices “reflect the idea that we cannot meet these challenges with old thinking and unchanged habits.” He said he tasked them with reasserting global and moral leadership, a clear swipe at Mr. Trump, who has resisted many traditional foreign alliances.

While Mr. Trump expected total loyalty from his Cabinet and chafed at pushback from advisers, Mr. Biden said he expected advisers to tell me “what I need to know, not what I want to know.”

Further drawing a contrast with Mr. Trump, Ms. Haines said she accepted Mr. Biden’s nomination knowing that “you value the perspective of the intelligence community, and that you will do so even when what I have to say may be inconvenient or difficult.”

Ms. Haines said she has “never shied away from speaking truth to power” and added “that will be my charge as director of national intelligence.”

Mr. Biden celebrated the diversity of his picks, offering a particularly poignant tribute to Ms. Thomas-Greenfield. The eldest of eight children who grew up in segregated Louisiana, she was the first to graduate from high school and college in her family. The diplomat, in turn, said that with his selections, Mr. Biden is achieving much more than a changing of the guard.

“My fellow career diplomats and public servants around the world, I want to say to you, ‘America is back, multilateralism is back, diplomacy is back,’” Ms. Thomas-Greenfield said.

Mr. Mayorkas, who is Cuban American, also offered a nod to his immigrant upbringing.

“My father and mother brought me to this country to escape communism,” he said. “They cherished our democracy, and were intensely proud to become United States citizens, as was I.”

But Mr. Mayorkas might pose the most difficult confirmation challenge from Mr. Biden’s early round of nominees.

The Senate previously confirmed him in December 2013 by a party-line vote to be the deputy secretary of Homeland Security. The Senate was controlled by Democrats then, and all of the chamber’s Republicans voted against his confirmation mainly because he was then under investigation by the inspector general in that department who had been appointed by President Barack Obama. At the time, the Senate historian’s office said it was unprecedented for the Senate to vote on a nominee who was under investigation.

The inspector general, John Roth, found in March 2015 that Mr. Mayorkas, as director of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, appeared to give special treatment to certain people as part of the visa program that gives residency preference to immigrants who agree to invest in the U.S. economy.

Meanwhile, there were signs on Tuesday that the stalled formal transition of power is now underway. Mr. Biden’s team now is in contact with all federal agencies, according to a transition official who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe developments that have not been announced.

At the Pentagon, Kash Patel, chief of staff to the acting secretary of defense, is heading the department’s transition work. A transition task force has been assembled, led by Tom Muir, head of the Pentagon office that provides administrative and management services to all Defense Department facilities in the Washington area.

Mr. Muir said the first meeting with Mr. Biden’s team was held virtually on Tuesday morning and that he expected daily meetings to come – some virtually and some in person. He said normal accommodations for the Biden team have been made, including provision of briefing materials, video-teleconferencing capabilities, and office space inside the Pentagon.

Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar also said his agency is working to get briefing materials to Mr. Biden’s aides immediately and pledged a “professional, cooperative, and collaborative” transition.

The moves came a day after the head of the General Services Administration wrote the necessary letter of “ascertainment” acknowledging Mr. Biden as the apparent winner of the election, triggering the transition process.

Mr. Trump, who continues to press a legal challenge to overturn the election results, again on Tuesday refused to concede his election loss, tweeting that “the GSA does not determine who the next President of the United States will be.”

This story was reported by The Associated Press. AP writer Robert Burns in Washington contributed to this report.

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