Mr Obama selected Mr Tom Daschle (left) to be his health secretary on Wednesday. Mr Daschle has served as a mentor to the president-elect, having encouraged him early on to run for the White House and advised him during the campaign. -- PHOTO: REUTERS
WASHINGTON - US PRESIDENT-elect Barack Obama's top choice to lead the US Department of Homeland Security is Arizona Governor Janet Napolitano, CNN reported on
Wednesday, citing multiple sources.
The Democratic governor, a supporter and campaigner for Mr Obama's presidential campaign, had been reported to be on a short list of people to fill cabinet posts in the new administration.
CNN also reported that Chicago businesswoman Penny Pritzker was Mr Obama's pick for commerce secretary.
Earlier this morning, former Senate leader Tom Daschle was announced as Mr Obama's choice to lead his high-risk drive to end the US healthcare crisis.
The president-elect, who takes office in January, spent the day hunkered down in his Chicago transition office, but a Democratic official said he asked ex-South Dakota senator Daschle to be health and human services secretary.
Mr Daschle, 60, will be charged with the task of shepherding healthcare reform legislation through Congress in line with Mr Obama's campaign vow to revamp the US medical system and help 45 million Americans who have no health insurance.
The last major healthcare reform attempt by a Democratic president, piloted by Mrs Hillary Clinton during her husband Bill Clinton's administration, ended in a notorious failure.
More than a decade on, there was no indication on Wednesday on whether the former first lady would accept Mr Obama's overtures about the job of secretary of state.
The Wall Street Journal reported former president Clinton had removed a barrier to the appointment by offering to submit his future charitable and business dealings to an ethics review if his wife becomes the top US diplomat.
Some analysts have questioned whether Mr Bill Clinton's myriad business deals, donor lists and contacts with foreign governments could raise conflicts of interest if his wife becomes the face of US foreign policy.
More than two weeks after Mr Obama's historic election victory, there was a morsel of comfort for his defeated rival John McCain, after the final vote totals finally nudged Missouri into the Republican's column.
The Arizona senator took the heartland swing state by a wafer-thin margin of 49.4 per cent to 49.3 per cent and no recount is expected.
The result, once certified, means the total in the state-by-state Electoral College total will stand at 365 to Mr Obama and 173 to Mr McCain. A total of 270 was needed for victory in the November 4 election.
Sixty-two days before Mr Obama is sworn in on January 20, he announced a raft of new top staff appointments in the White House, and offered broad hints of the make-up of his national security council team.
Mr David Axelrod, a Chicago political consultant who is perhaps Mr Obama's closest aide after they first met in the early 1990s, will work in the White House as senior advisor to the president.
Mr Greg Craig, another advisor who was in at the start of Mr Obama's presidential campaign, will serve as special counsel - the president's top lawyer.
Mr Craig is a former director of policy planning in the State Department and directed Mr Bill Clinton's defence against impeachment proceedings.
'I am pleased to announce these new additions to our team', Mr Obama said in a brief statement.
'I'll be relying on their broad and diverse experience in the months ahead as we work to strengthen our economy, reform Washington, and meet the great challenges of our time', he said.
Earlier, Mr Obama announced a list of former campaign advisors who will lead working groups to frame policy to ensure his administration gets off to a fast start.
Mr Daschle will lead the healthcare panel, while Mr James Steinberg, a hot tip to be national security advisor in the Obama administration, was named to head a national security working group.
Another close foreign policy aide, Ms Susan Rice, also tipped for a top White House or State Department national security post, will work alongside Mr Steinberg.
Mr Steinberg served as deputy national security advisor in Bill Clinton's administration and accompanied Mr Obama as an unpaid aide on his trip to Europe and the Middle East in July.
Ms Rice was assistant secretary of state for African affairs between 1997 and 2001.
Mr Daniel Tarullo, mentioned as a possibility for a job on the president's National Economic Council, was named as head of an economic working group during the transition.
Mr Obama's transition team said he worked through his call list of foreign leaders on Wednesday, reaching Colombian President Alvaro Uribe, Nigerian President Umaru Yar'Adua, Senegalese President Abdoulaye Wade, South African leader Kgalema Motlanthe and UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon. -- AFP