WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Republican President-elect Donald Trump’s picks for his Cabinet have included some historic firsts, though women and people of color make up less of the overall number than they did when Democratic President Joe Biden first took office.
HISTORIC FIRSTS
Florida political operative Susie Wiles, who ran Trump’s 2024 campaign, is set to be the first woman to hold the high-profile position of White House chief of staff.
U.S. Senator Marco Rubio, Trump’s pick for Secretary of State, would be the first person of Hispanic origin to hold that role if confirmed by his fellow senators.
Hedge fund executive Scott Bessent, nominee for Treasury Secretary, could become the first openly gay Republican Cabinet member confirmed by the Senate. The investor lives in South Carolina with his husband and two children.
Former U.S. Representative Tulsi Gabbard, with roots in both Samoan and Hawaiian cultures, would be the first director of national intelligence from the Pacific Islander community, according to Inclusive America, a non-profit that tracks diversity in government.
GENDER GAP
Trump has chosen eight women so far for his Cabinet, doubling the number from his first-term Cabinet selection. This is less than Biden’s first Cabinet made up of 11 women, which then rose to 13, a historical high for women serving concurrently, according to the Center for American Women and Politics. That compares with eight women during Barack Obama’s presidential Cabinet, five for George W. Bush and nine for Bill Clinton, according to the Center’s data.
RACE BREAKDOWN
Trump has so far picked four people of color for his Cabinet, representing about a fifth of it. That number is in line with his first term, but trails their roughly 40% share of the full U.S. population, according to the U.S. Census.
The number is also well below Biden’s Cabinet, which included 13 people of color, Obama’s with 10, Bush’s with six and Clinton’s with eight, according to Inclusive America.
GENERATIONAL BREAKDOWN
While Trump will be the oldest president to take office at age 78 – about five months older than Biden was at his Jan. 20, 2021 inauguration – the president-elect has chosen millennial and Gen-Z women for top roles.
Congresswoman Elise Stefanik, 40, the nominee for United Nations ambassador, will be the youngest person to hold this position if confirmed by the Senate.
Karoline Leavitt, 27, is also set to be the youngest White House press secretary ever, taking the highly…
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