From the transition
team:
In announcing Colorado Senator Ken Salazar as his choice for Secretary
of the Interior and Iowa Governor Tom Vilsack for Secretary of
Agriculture, President-elect Barack Obama made clear he considers both
Secretaries-designate to be key members of his energy and environment
team.
“It’s time for a new kind of leadership in Washington that’s committed
to using our lands in a responsible way to benefit all our families,”
President-elect Obama said. “That is the kind of leadership embodied
by Ken Salazar and Tom Vilsack.”
In their remarks, Secretaries-designate Salazar and Vilsack both
emphasized their commitment to focusing on energy issues.
“I look forward to working directly with President-elect Obama as an
integral part of his team as we take the moon shot on energy
independence,” Secretary-designate Salazar said. “That energy
imperative will create jobs here in America, protect our national
security, and confront the dangers of global warming.”
Secretary-designate Vilsack spoke of his commitment to “promote
American leadership in response to global climate change,” and
declared his intent to “place nutrition at the center of all food
programs administered by the Department.”
At the Nation, John Nichols criticizes the selection of
Vilsack
as “at best, a cautious pick,” saying “Obama could have done better,
much better.” Nichols pointed to progressive food politics leaders such
as writer Michael Pollan, Tom Buis, the president of the National
Farmers Union, Wisconsin Secretary of Agriculture Rod Nilsestuen or
North Dakota Commissioner of Agriculture Roger Johnson.
Even more impressive would have been former North Dakota Commissioner
of Agriculture Sarah Vogel, an always-ahead-of-the-curve advocate for
food safety and fair trade. The same can be said for Minnesota
Secretary of State Mark Ritchie, a former policy analyst in
Minnesota’s Department of Agriculture who co-founded and for many
years led the Minneapolis-based Institute for Agriculture and Trade
Policy.
(Buis praised Vilsack’s selection in the New York
Times and
Washington
Post.)
The Center for Biological
Diversity
calls Sen. Salazar’s record “especially weak in the arenas most
important to the next Secretary of the Interior: protecting scientific
integrity, combating global warming, reforming energy development and
protecting endangered species.”
In contrast, the League of Conservation
Voters
calls both “skilled, knowledgeable leaders committed to protecting our
environment and rebuilding our economy with clean, renewable energy.”
At the New
Republic,
Bradford Plumer delves into the scandal-ridden Department of Interior
Salazar will inherit.