[Bloomberg]( Follow Us [Get the newsletter]( Get Jonathan Bernsteinâs newsletter every morning in your inbox. [Click here to subscribe](. Senator Ted Cruz (AWOL-Cancun) is on a roll, [criticizing]( Xavier Becerra, President Joe Bidenâs nominee to lead the Department of Health and Human Services, for having what he sees as the wrong qualifications for the job: âIf a Republican tried to nominate a trial lawyer like Xavier Becerra to lead HHS in the midst of a global pandemic, they would be laughed out of the room.â Heâs not alone; Cruz joined 10 other Republican senators in complaining that Becerra is [unqualified for the position](. Theyâre wrong. In fact, Becerra, who spent 12 terms in the House before serving as Californiaâs attorney general starting in 2017, couldnât be a more typical nominee. And there are very good reasons why presidents keep picking nominees with similar backgrounds. The job of a cabinet secretary, whether at HHS or elsewhere, is more than anything a political job, so politicians are the ones with the right training for the position. Thatâs why President Ronald Reaganâs [HHS secretaries]( included Richard S. Schweiker, who had been a senator from Pennsylvania, and Margaret Heckler, a former House member from Massachusetts, neither of whom had any relevant specialist knowledge. (A third HHS secretary under Reagan, Otis Bowen, was a doctor â and also a former two-term governor of Indiana with a 20-year political career.) President George W. Bushâs HHS secretaries, Wisconsinâs Tommy Thompson and Utahâs Mike Leavitt, had both been governors. Again, neither had any subject-matter expertise. Itâs true that some cabinet secretaries have been specialists, such as former Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz, who was a scientist. But there are also plenty like Elaine Chao, who went from chair of the Federal Maritime Commission to deputy transportation secretary to director of the Peace Corps to secretary of labor to secretary of transportation. In other words, sheâs been a general-purpose governing professional who knows how to manage a bureaucracy. Not a policy specialist. Politicians, governing professionals, policy specialists: All have their advantages. But especially in a sprawling department like HHS, specialists have a real disadvantage because no one can be an expert in all the necessary policy areas. Besides, the government has no shortage of people who know about pandemics. What it needs are people with the political skills to coordinate the federal bureaucracy, state and local governments, private business, a variety of hostile and friendly interest groups, and more, all while keeping Democrats in Congress happy and not giving Republicans any ammunition they can use against the president. Becerraâs experience at the top of a state bureaucracy seems a particularly useful background for this stage of the pandemic. Given the choice, Iâd much rather have someone who knows how to make things happen in state governments than someone with a deep scientific understanding of how coronaviruses spread. Especially since one of the skills that politicians need to be successful is learning how to be briefed on a wide range of policy questions. Cruz [says](: âIâve been a lawyer for 25 yrs & a Senator for 8. Would you hire me to remove your appendix? Of course not. Iâm not remotely qualified to be HHS Secretary.â To his first point: No, personal medical care is not, in fact, part of the HHS secretaryâs job. To his second point? Whatâs needed is a skilled politician. I wonât disagree with Cruzâs implied self-assessment. 1. Matt Grossmann talks with Robert Lupton and Elizabeth Chase Connors about the roots of [partisan polarization](. 2. Dan Drezner on [foreign-policy narratives](. 3. Jowei Chen and Nicholas Stephanopoulos on [gerrymandering](. 4. Amy Walter on why internal Republican politics will probably play a much [smaller role in 2022 than some imagine](. Probably correct! 5. Michael Grunwald on [Democrats now and in 2009](. 6. Al Hunt on [Christian conservatives who defied Trump](. 7. Greg Sargent on Republicans and the [commission to investigate the Jan. 6 insurrection](. 8. And Ed Kilgore remembers an [old Washington scandal](. Get Early Returns every morning in your inbox. [Click here to subscribe](. Also subscribe to [Bloomberg All Access]( and get much, much more. Youâll receive our unmatched global news coverage and two in-depth daily newsletters, the Bloomberg Open and the Bloomberg Close.  Before itâs here, itâs on the Bloomberg Terminal. Find out more about how the Terminal delivers information and analysis that financial professionals canât find anywhere else. [Learn more](. Â
You received this message because you are subscribed to Bloomberg's Early Returns newsletter.
[Unsubscribe]( | [Bloomberg.com]( | [Contact Us](
Bloomberg L.P. 731 Lexington, New York, NY, 10022