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Biden picks Michigan’s Granholm for Energy, North Carolina’s Regan for EPA and New Mexico’s Haaland for Interior
Joe Biden during the final debate with President Donald Trump in Nashville, Tenn. (Photo by Jim Bourg-Pool | Getty Images).
President-elect Joe Biden will nominate U.S. Rep. Debra Haaland to lead the Interior Department, former Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm to head the Energy Department and North Carolina’s top environmental regulator, Michael Regan, to lead the Environmental Protection Agency, his presidential transition team said Thursday night.
The selections were announced as part of the incoming Biden administration’s climate agenda. Biden made climate change a top issue in his campaign.
Along with Haaland, Granholm and Regan, the transition announced environmental law expert Brenda Mallory would chair the Council on Environmental Quality and former EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy would be a national climate advisor, with longtime Biden advisor Ali Zaidi as McCarthy’s deputy. Zaidi immigrated from Pakistan and grew up outside Erie, Pa.
“This brilliant, tested, trailblazing team will be ready on day one to confront the existential threat of climate change with a unified national response rooted in science and equity,” Biden said in the release.
Granholm was the 47th governor of Michigan, serving two terms, and the first woman in history to be the state’s chief executive. The Biden team said that “Granholm’s leadership was instrumental in rescuing the U.S. auto industry, saving one million jobs, and preparing Detroit for a clean energy future.”
Regan, the secretary of the North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality, served in the EPA under both Republican and Democratic presidents “and has a distinguished track record of bringing people together across the public, private, and non-profit sectors to advance environmental justice and seek solutions to environmental and climate challenges,” the Biden team said.
If confirmed by the Senate, Haaland would be the first Native American person to hold a Cabinet role.
The Interior Department manages about 500 million acres of the roughly 640 million acres under federal control. Through bureaus and offices including the National Park Service, Bureau of Land Management, Bureau of Indian Affairs and the Fish and Wildlife Service, the department sets and enforces federal land use, environmental and tribal policies.
In a Twitter post Thursday, Haaland noted the significance of her selection.
“A voice like mine has never been a Cabinet secretary or at the head of the Department of Interior,” she said. “Growing up in my mother’s Pueblo household made me fierce. I’ll be fierce for all of us, our planet, and all of our protected land.” Haaland is a member of the Laguna of Pueblo.
Other congressional Democrats and allied environmental groups voiced support for Haaland.
House Natural Resources Chairman Raul Grijalva, D-Ariz., praised the choice Thursday for its historical significance and policy implications. Last month, Grijalva penned a letter signed by 52 other House Democrats across the party’s ideological spectrum that lobbied Biden to select Haaland.
“You’re taking history full circle,” Grijalva said in a call with reporters Thursday. “You’re taking an Interior Department that for years, its principal responsibility was the legacy of disenfranchisement of Native people in this country…. Now you have an Indigenous person with great capacity assuming the role of running” the department.
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