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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
National

Biden taps Julie Su to lead Labor Department

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden said Tuesday that he would nominate Julie Su, the deputy secretary of labor and the preferred choice of the Congressional Black Caucus, to become secretary of the Department of Labor.

Su would replace Marty Walsh, who is leaving in March to become executive director of the National Hockey League Players’ Association.

“Julie is a tested and experienced leader, who will continue to build a stronger, more resilient, and more inclusive economy that provides Americans a fair return for their work and an equal chance to get ahead,” Biden said in a statement. “Over several decades, Julie has led the largest state labor department in the nation, cracked down on wage theft, fought to protect trafficked workers, increased the minimum wage, created good-paying, high-quality jobs, and established and enforced workplace safety standards.”

If confirmed by the Senate, Su would take over the department amid a very strong market but with economic forces suggesting that it could weaken. The Federal Reserve has been steadily raising interest rates since early 2022 as it seeks to slow the rate of inflation. Those rate hikes have thus far had little effect on employment, but many economists expect that to change.

She is likely to face questioning about the department’s environment, social and governance rule that allows managers of pension funds to consider ESG factors in investment decisions. Congressional Republicans have criticized the rule, and the House is scheduled to vote Tuesday on a measure that would disapprove the rule.

Vermont independent Sen. Bernie Sanders, who chairs the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, praised the choice. “I look forward to working with her to protect workers’ rights and build the trade union movement in this country,” he said in a statement.

Walsh also praised Su in his departure note to the Labor Department staff in mid-February.

“Julie is an incredible leader and has been central to our success as a team and as a Department. With the kind of leadership and talent assembled across the Department, I am confident there will be continuity and the work will be sustained,” he said.

Su became deputy secretary of labor in July 2021 after being confirmed on a party-line, 50-47 vote in the Senate.

Her work in government began as California labor commissioner in 2011. She previously spent 17 years as a civil rights attorney representing workers who the White House said are often invisible, including Thai garment workers trafficked to the United States. She received a MacArthur fellowship in 2001 for that work.

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