Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Obama Dreaming of Davis For DHS?

His payoff for his dutiful roll in helping with the scripted and staged Boston Marathon bombings a la Bernie Kerik?

"Davis in running for Homeland Security post" August 02, 2013

Boston Police Commissioner Edward F. Davis is beginning to be mentioned as a candidate for the next secretary of homeland security, with speculation in Washington and Boston suggesting he may be in the mix for the prominent federal post.

Senators, who expect President Obama to announce his nomination in the next few weeks, have been told the White House is vetting “a handful of people,” according to a Senate source familiar with the talks but who spoke on condition of anonymity.

The White House would neither confirm nor deny whether Davis is on a list of candidates. But as the commissioner has become a fixture in Washington in the wake of the Boston Marathon bombings, he has gained a reputation as a no-nonsense cop who encouraged Congress to seek more answers on whether the FBI was doing enough to share its intelligence information.

“His service to Boston has been exemplary, and the Boston Police Department’s response to the Boston Marathon bombings was exceptional, ” Senator Kelly Ayotte, a New Hampshire Republican and member of the Senate Committee on Homeland Security, said in a statement to the Globe.

Members of the Massachusetts delegation to Congress, including Senator Elizabeth Warren and Representative Niki Tsongas, on Thursday also praised Davis’s leadership during the Boston bombings.

“He demonstrated the kind of calm under pressure that would make him an excellent leader for Homeland Security,” Warren said in a statement.

Tsongas, a Lowell Democrat, also lauded Davis’s work as police chief of Lowell before taking the Boston job.

Davis declined to comment on the speculation, saying in a statement only, “I’m very happy serving the citizens of Boston.”

To date, much of the speculation has centered on several other candidates, including New York City Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly; William J. Bratton, who has run the New York, Los Angeles, and Boston police departments; Thad Allen, a retired Coast Guard commandant; TSA administrator John Pistole; and Jane Holl Lute, who was the department’s former deputy secretary.

That's right, that's Ray Kelly of racist "stop-and-frisk" fame. 

Obama can't actually be considering him in the wake of Zimmerman, can he?

Several key lawmakers, including a few from Massachusetts, seemed caught off guard this week by talk that Davis also could be in the running. But some said the pick would make sense. Davis made an impression when he led the investigation into the Marathon bombings. He cut a national profile when he testified in the weeks after, appearing before several congressional committees.

The current secretary of homeland security, Janet Napolitano, announced three weeks ago she was stepping down in September to become president of the University of California system.

Related: Slow Saturday Special: Natty Napolitano 

The feeling here is she is getting out because a big bang is on the way.

The security role is an extremely challenging one, mixing law enforcement and border control issues with coordinating the government’s response to hurricanes and oil spills. The department also oversees immigration, and the next homeland security chief will come in at a time when the White House is aggressively pushing for immigration reform.

Napolitano, as former governor of Arizona, was in a position to be an advocate for reform and that may be a trait the Obama administration looks for in her replacement.

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Related:

Minority officers call for Edward Davis’s resignation

Davis defends his record on diversity

Obama can't be thinking of nominating him, can he?