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Biden Administration International Affairs Personnel Tracker

Gina Raimondo

Secretary of Commerce

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Gina Raimondo is the U.S. Secretary of Commerce since March 2, 2021. A politician and venture capitalist, Raimondo has been the 75th governor of Rhode Island since 2015. Raimondo also served as head of the Democratic Governors Association in 2019. During the presidential primary, Raimondo served as national co-chair for New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

Before her election as the governor, she served as general treasurer of Rhode Island from 2011 to 2015. Before running for office, she acted as senior vice president for fund development at the Manhattan offices of Village Ventures, a venture capital firm backed by Bain Capital and Highland Capital Groups. In 2000, Raimondo co-found her own venture capital firm, Point Judith Capital. Ms. Raimondo has a law degree from Yale University and earned a doctorate from Oxford University, where she was a Rhodes scholar.

Views On China

During her Senate confirmation hearing, Raimondo noted the need to “invest in innovation and technology in our manufacturing sector and take aggressive trade enforcement actions to combat unfair trade practices from China and other nations.” In order to do that, Raimondo said, the United States need to develop a “whole-of-government response” in coordination with U.S. allies.

When asked about whether companies including Huawei, ZTE and SMIC are correctly listed on the Entity List, Raimondo said that she has “no reason to believe that entities on those lists should not be there” and noted that the Department “has an ongoing process” to determine whether placement of additional entities is warranted.

Some observers expect Raimondo to ease trade tensions with Beijing “given her past moderate rhetoric about China,” according to Global Times. In reporting Raimondo’s nomination, The New York Times noted that other critics questioned whether Raimondo has the technical background to address the technology challenges from China. In addition to denouncing deindustrialization and promoting business in Rhode Island, Raimondo had some firsthand personal experience with China’s economic challenges to U.S. job availability: Her father was laid off when the watch factory where he worked in Providence, R.I., moved to China.

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Page Last Updated: August 2, 2021

*None of the personnel in this tracker are associated with the Institute for China-America Studies. All images used on this page are sourced from the official Biden-Harris transition website buildbackbetter.gov or the public domain.*