WASHINGTON — President-elect Joe Biden on Monday picked California Attorney General Xavier Becerra to lead the Department of Health and Human Services, and created three new senior White House positions intended to signal a more aggressive response to Covid-19, including addressing its disproportionate impact on Black people and Latinos.
Becerra, 62, served 12 terms in the House of Representatives and was a vigorous defender of the Affordable Care Act who led the defense of the law in the Supreme Court last month.
If he is confirmed, he would be the first Latino to lead the massive department as the incoming administration tries to elevate more diverse candidates to front-line positions. Biden offered Becerra the position in a phone call Friday.
The news of his selection was first reported by The New York Times.

In 2016, Becerra was elected in California to run the largest state justice department in the country, succeeding Vice President-elect Kamala Harris after she was elected to the Senate.
His experience in the role, which included working with Republican officials to increase access to new Covid-19 treatments and spearheading legal challenges to opioid manufacturers, factored into his getting the final nod, according to the sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity ahead of an official announcement planned for Tuesday.
Becerra is the second Latino tapped as a Cabinet official in the Biden administration, joining Alejandro Mayorkas, who was nominated last week to lead the Department of Homeland Security.
In addition to Becerra, Biden is tapping Dr. Rochelle Walensky, a leading expert on virus testing, prevention and treatment to serve as director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
She is currently chief of infectious diseases at Massachusetts General Hospital and a professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School.
Politico was first to report the pick of Walensky to run the CDC.
A surprise
The appointment of Becerra to lead HHS came as something of a surprise, given that he was not originally mentioned as a top contender for the position.
New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, the co-chair of Biden’s transition who was favored by the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, fell out of contention after turning down the job of interior secretary. Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo, who had also been on the short list, took herself out of contention Friday, saying her focus needed to stay on battling her state’s spiking Covid caseload.
Last week, Biden picked Dr. Vivek Murthy to return as surgeon general and said the top federal infectious disease expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci, would take on the additional role of chief medical adviser. Former National Economic Council director Jeff Zients will be named coordinator of the Covid-19 response.
With the pandemic surging nationwide, Biden has sought to assemble a team with significant experience in public health, government and crisis management skills to restore public trust in the federal response.
Fauci is expected to work closely with Zients, whose title will include counselor to the president. Both new positions are intended to telegraph a deeper government role, including overseeing supply chains, in ending a pandemic that has sickened 14 million Americans and killed more than 280,000. President Donald Trump, by contrast, has made clear he doesn’t want the federal government organizing supply chains for personal protective gear or testing and contract tracing programs.
Fauci, who will remain director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, has clashed repeatedly with Trump over the federal response to the pandemic. In a “TODAY” show interview on Friday, he said that he’d accepted Biden’s offer “on the spot.”
Zients’s background managing complex initiatives — including creating HealthCare.gov in 2013 to help enroll more Americans in the Affordable Care Act — helped prepare him to oversee vaccine distribution, the personal protective gear and vaccine supply chain and to improve coordination across federal agencies and state and local governments, Biden officials said.
On Tuesday, Biden is expected to formally announced the roles for Becerra, Walensky, Murthy, Fauci and Zients, plus other members of his administration’s health team, including:



