On December 16, 2020, history was made as the first open LGBTQ person was nominated for a cabinet position. President-elect Joe Biden announced that Pete Buttigieg, the former mayor of South Bend, IN, has been selected to be the Secretary of Transportation in the new Biden-Harris administration.
The Senate would have to confirm
this nomination for this historic breakthrough to be official. And they will.
Yes, Mitch McConnell is a serial
obstructionist and a spiteful one at that. And he could cause mischief with
Biden’s cabinet nominees assuming his party retains control of the Senate and
that is certainly an open question. And yes, Republican senators still under
the thumb of sore loser Trump may resist anything Joe Biden tries to put
forward. But in Mayor Pete‘s case, they will confirm.
For one thing, the Department of
Transportation, important as it will be in a potential infrastructure deal as
well as energy and climate considerations, is not part of the top tier cabinet
positions. Those include State, Defense, Treasury and Justice. Therefore, the nomination
should not be one in which Republicans will find ideological differences to contest.
Secondly, Mr. Buttigieg is a
centrist and not a “left wing radical,” the type that Republicans loath. During
his campaign he promised to work across the aisle so that will bode well for
him during the Senate confirmation process.
Mr. Buttigieg’s personal story is compelling. A Rhodes Scholar, a military veteran, an ability to speak some seven languages fluently, and the first gay presidential candidate from a major political party to win delegates during a primary are qualities that endeared him to many in the public and media after he burst onto the scene two years ago.
The historic nature of this
selection will not be lost on the Senate. When McConnell grudgingly
acknowledged Biden’s victory the day before, he proudly announced that Kamala
Harris will be the first female vice president. If nothing else, the Senate
reveres history.
If they block the nomination, the
media and the public writ large will assume it was due to homophobia and not on
the merits. That is a possibility for sure given that the Senate contains a
fair number of bigots.
But it would be politically
damaging to the Republicans if that perception gains traction. It’s not a good
way to expand their “tent” if suburban women see this rejection for what it is.
If this election proved anything, you cannot win a national race with just the
base.
Moreover, there are a number of
gay Republicans who are big donors. The GOP should keep that in mind.
The only reason I can fathom in
which the Senate would reject this nomination is that they don’t want to
bolster Mr. Buttigieg’s resume. He is an enormous political talent as evidenced by his brief remarks following Mr. Biden's introduction, and at age
38, a future presidential run is likely. The experience he will garner at the
federal/cabinet level will put the kabash on his lack of resume. He will pose
an enormous threat to Republicans in a potential presidential bid should he
capture the Democratic nomination.
Nonetheless, the Senate
Republicans will be eyeing the near term and should have no ostensible reason
to reject this nomination with more significant battles looming. Mayor Pete
should sail through without a hitch, and we will be calling him Secretary Pete
in a few months.
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