Tag cabinet posts

You’ve Won Some Lovely Parting Gifts, Hillary, Thanks For Playing Our Game!

So here’s my take on this whole “Hillary For Secretary Of State” thing: it’s a ploy.

Obama took a lot of flak for not making Hillary his running mate. The campaign made a very cursory effort at making it look like they were at least putting her on the short list, but nobody except the Hillary-Hating Republican crowd thought it was anything except the illusion it turned out to be.

They are doing the very same thing now, but doing a slightly better job of making it look realistic. The stories right after the election about John Kerry wanting the job were more of a traditional “trial balloon”, and they got shot down pretty fast by a very unhappy party. Hillary Clinton seems to be getting far more serious consideration as an actual possibility, but over the last 48 hours there have been all these stories about how Bill Clinton’s assorted post-presidential activities might create conflicts of interests and how he hasn’t been all that cooperative about turning over his lists of donors and contributors. And it’s my belief that the Obama people completely and utterly anticipated that and are ready to use it as a way to shuffle her out the door without looking like the bad guys.

I also believe that Hillary’s people knew all of this, too, and needed to play along for the sake of rehabilitating her public image after the “sore loser” end-game of her primary campaign. She sucked it up and played nice in the fall campaign, but did not get as much credit for it as she probably deserved. So this gives her a more favorable opportunity AND lets Bill look like the bad guy all over again. Moreover, I think HRC herself is 100% aware that her destiny is now in the United States Senate as the likeliest successor to Ted Kennedy as the ideological leadership of the Senate Democrats, and recognizes that there is absolutely no upside for her in actually becoming Secretary of State.

And for Bill, he takes the short-term hit on his reputation in the U.S., which isn’t all that great to begin with, but he doesn’t have to curtail his present-day activities for Hillary’s behalf. WIN-WIN-WIN.

Personally, I think Obama’s stealth candidate for State is Chuck Hagel — openly critical of Bush and the GOP, but with enough cred to fit the “bipartisan” approach Obama seems to be taking, has sufficient foreign policy experience, AND because State doesn’t have any domestic policy role to speak of, it helps to neutralize the elements of Hagel that are more objectionable to us pinko commie liberal bastards, namely his conservative and religious positions on domestic issues.

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Larry The Money Guy

Apparently former Clinton Administration Treasury Secretary and recently-deposed President of Harvard University Larry Summers is on the short list of people being considered for that same position (Treasury Secretary, that is, not President of Harvard) by Barack Obama.

This particular piece of news hasn’t exactly gotten a lot of positive response, since Summers, along with Clinton’s first Treasury Secretary, Robert Rubin (who is also on Obama’s short list), is persona non grata in Washington these days. Summers and Rubin were both big supporters of Alan Greenspan, who is the Scapegoat-In-Chief for the current economic disaster we’re in. One pundit I read yesterday said appointing Summers back to the Department of Treasury was like appointing Osama bin Laden as Secretary of Homeland Security.

Frankly, I think Obama’s going to have quite a hard time filling his Cabinet slots with people who have adequate experience but who don’t come with a lot of political baggage left over from the Clinton years. This piece in Slate today by Tim Noah basically demands that Obama dump anybody and everybody who’s been publicly discussed, leaving me to wonder just who the hell Noah thinks Obama can find for these jobs.

But that’s a bit of a sidetrack… What I wanted to share with you in this post is an article Summers wrote for the previous issue of Harvard Magazine which spells out what he thinks the biggest economic issues facing the incoming President are. The article was published before the Wall Street implosions, but someone as far on the inside as Summers absolutely knew those were coming when he was writing this article. He lays out a six-point agenda that focuses on the “real” economy rather than the financial sector’s crisis, but which would have greater direct impact on the lives and well-being of Americans and the rest of the world. (Here’s some good reading on the distinction between the “real” economy and the “phony” economy from the June issue of Harper’s)

Given Summers’ present political black mark, I’d be very surprised to see him be asked to sit in the Obama Cabinet, but I do suspect he’ll continue to act unofficially as an economic adviser to Obama, which he’s already been doing for some time. So this article may give us some clues as to where the new Administration might be looking to take action soon.

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