• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Obama rounds out cabinet with labor secretary pick

CHICAGO
Thu Dec 18, 2008 2:46pm EST

CHICAGO (Reuters) - President-elect Barack Obama has chosen California Democratic Rep. Hilda Solis as his labor secretary, a Democratic official said on Thursday, completing his major Cabinet appointments.

Barack Obama

Solis could be formally presented on Friday in Obama's final wave of job announcements which have introduced key members of his administration that takes office on January 20.

The proposed Cabinet, whose members must be confirmed by the Senate, includes two former Obama rivals for the Democratic presidential nomination, Hillary Clinton as secretary of state and Bill Richardson as commerce secretary.

It also includes Nobel Physics laureate Steven Chu as energy secretary and current Defense Secretary Robert Gates, who will keep his job.

Solis, 51, was first elected to Congress in 2000 and is considered a liberal. Of Hispanic origin, she represents a district dominated by Latino voters in Southern California.

The daughter of a union shop steward from Mexico and an assembly line worker from Nicaragua, Solis has led on both labor and environmental issues.

Obama is on schedule to complete most of his Cabinet picks by the end of the week before he leaves Chicago on Saturday for a family vacation in Hawaii.

He has chosen New York Federal Reserve President Timothy Geithner as treasury secretary and former treasury chief and Harvard University president Lawrence Summers to head the National Economic Council.

Obama has tapped former Dallas Mayor Ron Kirk to be U.S. trade representative, a source who knew of the decision said.

Democrats say Obama has offered the job of transportation secretary to Illinois Rep. Ray LaHood, a Republican.

On Thursday, he named seasoned regulator Mary Schapiro to head the Securities and Exchange Commission and Gary Gensler to lead the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, and charged them with leading broad financial regulatory reform.

(Writing by Andrew Quinn; editing by Eric Beech and Alan Elsner)



More from Reuters

Chairman of the Federal Reserve Ben Bernanke testifies before the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington July 22, 2009. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
John Kemp:

The Fed needs a new storyline

It's irrelevant whether the Fed sells its assets back to the market. What matters is whether and when it's prepared to raise rates.  Commentary 

A worker drives a Toyota Motor Corp's newly assembled Prius hybrid vehicle onto a trailer near the company's plant in Toyota, central Japan February 9, 2010.REUTERS/Yuriko Nakao
Reuters Breakingviews:

Toyota's troubles in overdrive

The cost of Toyota's recall nightmare is nothing compared to the price of fixing its battered reputation.  Commentary