Six experienced hands to fill top administration posts will be announced by President-elect Barack Obama.
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WASHINGTON -- US President-elect Barack Obama
plans on Monday to announce six experienced hands to fill top administration
posts, moving at record speed to name the leadership team that will guide his
presidency through a time of war and recession.
His
selections include longtime advisers and political foes alike, most notably
Democratic primary rival Hillary Rodham Clinton as secretary of state and
President Bush's defense secretary, Robert Gates, staying in his current post.
The two were among six who Obama planned to announce at a news conference in Chicago, Democratic
officials said.
The
officials said Obama also planned to name Washington lawyer Eric Holder as attorney
general and Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano as homeland security secretary. He
also planned to announce two senior foreign policy positions outside the
Cabinet: campaign foreign policy adviser Susan Rice as UN ambassador and
retired Marine Gen. James L. Jones as national security adviser.
The
Democratic officials disclosed the plans Sunday on a condition of anonymity
because they were not authorized for public release ahead of the news
conference. Those names had been discussed before for those jobs, but the officials
confirmed that Obama will make them official Monday in his hometown.
Obama
also has settled on former Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle to be his
secretary of Health and Human Services and New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson to
be Commerce secretary, but those announcements are not yet official. Last week,
he named key members of his economic team, including Timothy Geithner,
president of Federal Reserve Bank of New
York, as Treasury secretary.
The
decisions mean Obama has half of his Cabinet assembled less than a month after
the election, including the most prominent positions at State, Justice,
Treasury and Defense. The team so far shares deep experience and proven ability
to get things done, and it shares some characteristics with President Bush's first
Cabinet choices.
For
secretary of state, both went with big names that campaigned against them in
their primary race, with Obama choosing Clinton and Bush going with former
Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Colin Powell. At HHS, both chose deeply experienced
elected officials -- Obama picking Daschle and Bush choosing Wisconsin
Gov. Tommy Thompson.
They also
chose experienced Defense secretaries who had already served in the
position -- Gates for Obama and Donald Rumsfeld for Bush. And both put
well-respected governors as their first picks as Homeland Security
secretary -- a position Bush created -- with Obama picking Napolitano
and Bush picking Pennsylvania
Gov.TomRidge.
In some
cases, Obama is choosing even more experienced hands. Jones and Richardson have
more government experience than Bush's first national security adviser,
Condoleezza Rice, and his Commerce secretary, Donald Evans.
Clinton's nomination is the latest chapter
in what began as a bitter rivalry for the Democratic presidential nomination.
After Obama defeated her, Clinton
backed his general election campaign against Republican Sen. John McCain, and
she now has agreed to give up her Senate seat to be his top diplomat.
To make
it possible for his wife to become secretary of state, party officials said,
former President Bill Clinton agreed to:
*
Disclose the names of every contributor to his foundation since its inception
in 1997 and all contributors going forward.
* Refuse
donations from foreign governments to the Clinton Global Initiative, his annual
charitable conference.
* Cease
holding CGI meetings overseas.
*
Volunteer to step away from day-to-day management of the foundation while his
wife is secretary of state.
* Submit
his speaking schedule to review by the State Department and White House
counsel.
* Submit
any new sources of income to a similar ethical review.
"It's
a big step," said Sen. Richard G. Lugar of Indiana, the top Republican on
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, who said he plans to vote to confirm Clinton.
Lugar
said there would still be "legitimate questions" raised about the
former president's extensive international involvement. "I don't know how,
given all of our ethics standards now, anyone quite measures up to this who has
such cosmic ties, but ... hopefully, this team of rivals will work," Lugar
said.