Obama completes cabinet of ‘rivals’ line-up
CHICAGO, (AFP)
President-elect Barack Obama signaled a major shift in trade policy
and labor relations Friday as he rounded out a cabinet of ‘rivals’
tasked with implementing an ambitious US economic recovery plan.
Obama, who leaves Saturday for a Christmas holiday in Hawaii, said
trade agreements will have to be reciprocal and include “enforceable”
environmental and labor standards to prevent a “race to the bottom” and
a further loss of US jobs.
“In the global economy we must compete and win if we are going to
strengthen the middle class and forge bonds with other nations to
contribute to peace and stability around the world,” Obama said as he
completed his cabinet line-up.“But I also believe that any trade
agreement we sign must be written not just with the interests of big
corporations in mind, but with the interests of our whole nation and our
workers at heart.”
Obama tapped free trade advocate and former Dallas mayor Ron Kirk,
54, as US trade representative to take on the complex, delicate task of
juggling global negotiations.
“Like President-elect Obama, I believe a values-driven agenda that
stays true to our commitment to America’s workers and environmental
sustainability is not only consistent with a pro-trade agenda, but it’s
also necessary for its success,” Kirk said.
Obama, who takes office on January 20, also named Democratic lawmaker
Hilda Solis as labor secretary to stand up for working families, and a
former Republican congressman Ray LaHood as transport secretary to
rebuild the country’s transportation system.“For the past eight years,
the Department of Labor has not lived up to its role either as an
advocate for hardworking families or as an arbiter of fairness in
relations between labor and management,” Obama said.“That will change
when Hilda Solis is Secretary of Labor. Under her leadership, I am
confident that the Department of Labor will once again stand up for
working families.”
Putting LaHood in charge of a spending spree on the nation’s
crumbling infrastructure, Obama vowed he would be part of an
administration seeking to “craft a 21st century economic recovery plan,
with the goal of creating two and a half million new jobs and
strengthening our economy for the future.”
The 63-year-old is the second Republican named to Obama’s cabinet
after Robert Gates, who is staying on as secretary of defense.
“We need to remake our transportation system for the 21st century,”
Obama said.“Doing so will not only help us meet our energy challenge by
building more efficient cars, buses, and subways or make Americans safer
by rebuilding our crumbling roads and bridges, it will create millions
of new jobs in the process.”Obama leaves Saturday for Hawaii, where he
will spend the holidays with family and friends but will continue to do
transition work, his office said.
The president-elect also welcomed a 13.4-billion-dollar rescue
package put forward by the US government Friday for cash-strapped
General Motors and Chrysler.But he warned the country’s ailing
automakers not to “squander this chance to reform bad management
practices and begin the long-term restructuring that is absolutely
necessary to save this critical industry and the millions of American
jobs that depend on it.”Obama also said a “bold” stimulus plan was
needed to pull the US economy out of recession but would not provide a
dollar amount for the package.
Obama has proposed an ambitious stimulus plan to create 2.5 million
jobs through massive investments in infrastructure which some estimate
could cost up to a trillion dollars.While these are still early days,
Obama can bask in stellar polls since he won the November 4 elections
with 83 percent of respondents in a Marist survey Wednesday approving of
his performance so far. |