Obama chooses Locke to run Commerce Department

2/25/2009
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Locke
Locke

WASHINGTON President Obama on Wednesday announced he has chosen former Washington Gov. Gary Locke as his nominee for Commerce secretary, trying a third time to fill a key Cabinet post for a country in recession.

I m sure it s not lost on anyone that we ve tried this a couple of times. But I m a big believer in keeping at something until you get it right. And Gary is the right man for this job, Obama said, standing with the fellow Democrat in the Indian Treaty Room at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building near the White House.

The president s two top earlier choices for the post dropped out one a Democrat facing questions about a donor and the other a Republican who had a change of heart about working for a president from the opposition party well before the Senate had a chance to confirm them.

Obama praised Locke, a Chinese-American, as a man who shares his vision for turning around the moribund economy, and as someone who is committed to doing what it takes to keep the American dream alive.

Gary will be a trusted voice in my Cabinet, a tireless advocate for our economic competitiveness and an influential ambassador to American industry who will help us do everything we can, especially now, to promote our industry around the globe, Obama said.

I m grateful he s agreed to leave one Washington for another, the president added.

In turn, Locke said he was committed to making the sprawling agency an active and integral partner in advancing Obama s economic agenda, as it nurtures innovation, expands global markets, protects ocean fisheries and fosters growth.

The Department of Commerce can and will help create the jobs and the economic vitality our nation needs, Locke said.

If confirmed by the Senate, Locke would assume control of a large agency with a broad portfolio that includes overseeing many aspects of international trade, the 2010 national head count and oceans policy.

Locke, 59, was the nation s first Chinese-American governor, serving two terms in Washington from 1997 to 2005. He currently works for the Seattle-based law firm Davis Wright Tremaine on issues involving China, energy and governmental relations.

Obama initially tapped New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, a fellow Democrat, for the Cabinet post. He withdrew in January, before Obama took office, after the disclosure that a grand jury is investigating allegations of wrongdoing in the awarding of contracts in his state.

A month later, Obama announced that Republican Sen. Judd Gregg of New Hampshire had accepted the job. But a week after that, Gregg stepped down, citing irresolvable conflicts with the policies of the Democratic president.