Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Biden taps two additional Jewish nominees to senior posts in intelligence, health

Joe Biden has selected former CIA deputy director David Cohen to return to his former role, while also tapping Pennsylvania Health Secretary Rachel Levine to be U.S. Assistant Secretary for Health.

Former Deputy CIA director David Cohen, who was appointed to the same position by U.S. President-elect Joe Biden. Credit: Central Intelligence Agency via Wikimedia Commons.
Former Deputy CIA director David Cohen, who was appointed to the same position by U.S. President-elect Joe Biden. Credit: Central Intelligence Agency via Wikimedia Commons.

U.S. President-elect Joe Biden has appointed former CIA deputy director David Cohen to return to the same role.

The Biden transition team announced the move on Friday.

Cohen, 57, who is Jewish, will not need U.S. Senate confirmation to the deputy director role, which he held under U.S. President Barack Obama between 2015 and 2017. Therefore, he will be able to take on the role as soon as Biden is sworn in as president.

Meanwhile, Biden has tapped Pennsylvania Health Secretary Rachel Levine, who is also Jewish, to serve as U.S. Assistant Secretary for Health.

U.S. Assistant Secretary of Health nominee Rachel Levine. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.
U.S. Assistant Secretary of Health nominee Rachel Levine. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.

If she receives at least 51 votes in the U.S. Senate, Levin would be the first openly transgender federal official to be confirmed by the upper congressional chamber.

“A deeply experienced and effective public servant and public health expert, Dr. Levine was confirmed three times by the Republican-controlled Pennsylvania state senate to serve as Secretary of Health and the state’s physician general,” said the Biden transition team in a statement on Tuesday.

Levine, 63, has been Pennsylvania’s top health official since 2017.

“You can’t call yourself independent when you’re being funded specifically by a government,” Hillel Neuer of UN Watch told JNS.
David Bocarsly, of Jewish California, stated that the vote was a “powerful statement that California stands with every person of faith and their constitutional right to worship.”
“No one’s pain is greater or more important than others,” Gov. Josh Shapiro told Politico. “But from a data perspective, there has been a dramatic spike in antisemitism that is unmatched elsewhere, and that’s a problem.”
“The Iranian military’s latest attempt to extort global maritime trade is proof that Economic Fury has left the regime desperate for cash,” the U.S. treasury secretary stated.
The state’s education department, rather than its coordinator under the 1964 Civil Rights Act, is also responsible for reporting annually on incidents of antisemitism.
Jewish watchdog CIDI recorded 281 cases last year and said anti-Zionism is increasingly used to mask antisemitism.