Obama Taps Bill Richardson For Commerce
CBS News Confirms Announcement Will Be Made Wednesday In Chicago
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New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson waves to the crowed as he gets ready to speak on the final day of the Democratic National Convention at Invesco Field in Denver, Thursday, Aug. 28, 2008. (AP)
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Richardson was Energy secretary and United Nations ambassador in the administration of President Bill Clinton. He sought the Democratic presidential nomination this year, but eventually dropped out and endorsed Mr. Obama.
He is one of the nation's most prominent Hispanic politicians, and was in the House before joining Mr. Clinton's Cabinet.
Democratic officials said Tuesday that Mr. Obama will join Richardson at a news conference in Chicago on Wednesday. They would speak only on condition of anonymity because the announcement hasn't been made.
A two-term governor of New Mexico, Richardson seemed to both relish the job, but also long for something more. Richardson's name was in the hopper as a possible vice president, then as secretary of state. Neither happened.
"I love my job (as governor). I'm not looking for a job," he said when asked shortly before the election whether he would accept a position in an Obama administration. But in recent weeks it also became clear that Richardson was not about to turn down a Cabinet assignment, even if secretary of state was out of the question.
Richardson, 61, boasts an extensive and wide-ranging resume. He has been described as a blend of East Coast establishment and Western individualism with a dash of Third World acumen. He combines a relentless competitiveness and political savvy with a jocular sense of humor and down-to-earth style that often tears down boundaries and disarms adversaries, associates say.
"His personality gets him in the door," says David Goldwyn, an associate of Richardson's at the United Nations. "From there he's got to deliver the message, he's got to be persuasive, and he's got to secure the objective. That's where the other part of his personality comes in - his relentlessness."
The Commerce secretary's job includes selling America to the international business community and dealing with trade issues.
As a seven-term congressman, Richardson showed a knack for freelance diplomacy, rushing off to such places as North Korea, Sudan, Cuba and Iraq on unofficial diplomatic missions. In 1995, he persuaded Iraqi President Saddam Hussein to release two American aerospace workers who had wandered into Iraq from Kuwait. He helped free three Red Cross workers in Sudan and mediated with North Korea over the downing of two U.S. Army helicopter pilots.
Richardson was disappointed when President Clinton passed him over for secretary of state. But in 1996, Mr. Clinton named him U.N. Ambassador. Two years later Clinton asked him to become energy secretary where Richardson was confronted almost immediately by an uproar over allegations of Chinese spying - later found to be untrue - and of a rash of security lapses at one of the government's premiere nuclear weapons labs at Los Alamos. Members of Congress criticized his handling of the matter, though many of the problems predated his arrival at the department.
In 2002, Richardson easily won election as governor of New Mexico, a state with a large Hispanic population and one he had represented in Congress for 14 years. He was re-elected in 2006 with 69 percent of the vote.
He continued to maintain a high national profile as chairman of the Democratic National Governors Association and by raising money for congressional candidates in the 2006 elections. And he sought to stake out positions on energy, land use, the environment and immigration.
Richardson was credited with helping to turn out the Hispanic vote for Mr. Obama. He would often switch between English and Spanish while campaigning. But he also lamented in an interview during his own presidential bid that because of his surname, many people didn't think he was Hispanic.
Born in Pasadena, Calif., Richardson's father was an international banker from Boston and his mother was Mexican. He lived his early childhood in Mexico City where his father worked for CitiBank. But as a teenager he attended an exclusive boarding school in Concord, Mass., and later earned a masters degree in international affairs from Tufts University.
He settled in New Mexico with politics on his mind. His first try at politics fell short, but he surprised political experts in 1980 - after only two years in the state - by coming within 1,000 votes of unseating veteran GOP Congressman Manuel Lujan.
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- So far, every cabinet choice that Obama has made are smart ones -- how refreshingly different from many of the do-nothing duds that constituted the bulk of the Bush cabinet.
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- The Titanic sank pretty fast----This administration will beat it hands down.HANG ON!!!!!
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- Thats funny, don''''''''t pin your hopes on a speedy Supreme Court decision if this is even true. The Supreme Court has a serious backlog of cases, by the time something to do with a form Obama filled out comes before them he will have served 2 terms and retired and thats if they will even agree to hear the case! LOL
Posted by spinproof
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If they decide to view this case, they will make it a priority and listen to it soon, probably before Jan 20th. If he is lying he should not be allowed to be President.
Posted by keystonebull at 10:26 AM : Dec 03, 2008
If this were really an issue Hillary would have scored it, Obama has been vetted, there is nothing there, Clinton''s people would have found it trust me! - Reply to this comment
- The neocons are going to complain about anything Obama does, so who cares? President-Elect Obama is putting together a brillant team to help him govern, and we all will be better off because of it. Lastly, he gets to name any vacancies on the Supremem Court and I know that makes you nutty loons even more crazy
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- With 5 cases in the supreme court, VA, SC, AL
Posted by banders6 at 09:28 AM : Dec 03, 2008
Thats funny, don''t pin your hopes on a speedy Supreme Court decision if this is even true. The Supreme Court has a serious backlog of cases, by the time something to do with a form Obama filled out comes before them he will have served 2 terms and retired and thats if they will even agree to hear the case! LOL - Reply to this comment
- With 5 cases in the supreme court, VA, SC, AL electoral college%u2019s refusing to cast their votes until BO shows papers, many other electoral colleges waiting for the results from VA,SC,AL before they will cast their vote on the 15th, BO defying a supreme court ruling that was set for 12-1-08 to show papers, 15 other law suits filed, his forged selective service card, he has 3 law firms defending him spending hundreds of thousands of dollars to defend himself, question is, from what, why? Questions about his mothers busy month of Aug where she bore him in Hawaii, enrolled and started classes in WA the same month. A rally at the supreme court on Friday when the full court hears BO case. And with full page ads in news papers running asking for papers, but the obedient MSM is following their money and saying nothing, when will Oprah release them. And all the libs can say is get out your tin foil hats, do they think this is going away?
The forgery alone in a crime and will get him impeached, and don%u2019t believe me just get your own copy from the freedom of information act and see for yourself. Remember Nixon got impeached for only being accused of a crime, BO has committed a crime. - Reply to this comment
- Richardson is a good choice.
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- Then how come New Mexico is an economic basket case and has been for a long time?
Posted by jowand at
NM is one of the least populated states in the country. Recently, we have developed new technology industries (besides Intel) including solar panel plants from Germany. NM is getting better, a lot better, and Bill has been part of the solution.
He''ll do a good job as Commerce Secretary, dont worry! - Reply to this comment
- So this is Richardson''s reward for sellin'' out Hillary in the primaries ........
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- If you are a republican trying to talk economics, stop. We''''ve all seen what nutjobs do with money.
In fact everything a nutjobb does is complete failure. Hence the last 8 years.
Posted by stevex47 at 08:27 PM : Dec 02, 2008
A Democrat controlled Congress is spending the money right now, all 700 billion of the tax payers money. - Reply to this comment

President Obama's 



