Former Politico staffer Mike Allen has published, via his new Axios newsletter, a list of what he says are the names of individuals who were being considered for Hillary Clinton Cabinet jobs. Allen may be an ethically challenged shill, but he’s a well-connected one, so the list is probably worth taking seriously. Some highlights (he suggests that the jobs that only have one name next to them had been all but decided on):

Secretary of State: John Podesta, Bill Burns, Joe Biden

Treasury Secretary: Sheryl Sandberg, Lael Brainard

Secretary of Labor: Howard Schultz

Secretary of Health and Human Services: Neera Tanden

Secretary of Commerce: Gregory Meeks, Sheryl Sandberg, Terry McAuliffe

One of the big concerns that many Democrats had about Hillary Clinton was that she felt quite comfortable appealing to the interests of big banks and corporate executives. And while some of the people on the list above are generally known as solid progressives, like Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta and Center for American Progress president Neera Tanden, some of them very much are not. Sheryl Sandberg, the COO of Facebook, was Larry Summers’ chief of staff during his infamously bank-friendly and deregulation-tastic tenure in Bill Clinton’s Treasury Department. Howard Schultz is the founder of Starbucks, a company that’s long been hostile to organized labor. And Terry McAuliffe is perhaps the original corporate centrist Democrat.

Thanks in part to figures like Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren, the role that centrist economic policy has played in exacerbating wealth inequality is one of increasing interest to the Democratic “base.” Nominating figures like Sandberg, Schultz, and McAuliffe to three of the most important economic jobs in the new administration would have created quite a conflict between PEOTUS Clinton and that base.

Of course, Donald Trump is going to be president instead, so neither this nor anything else a Democrat has ever said, thought, or done, currently matters in D.C.

Also of note: Michèle Flournoy* was tipped to become the first female secretary of defense. And, in Allen’s words, the job of running the Environmental Protection Agency was “likely” going to go to “an African American.” Which “African American,” apparently, didn’t really matter. And that is how United States politics work.

*Correction, Jan. 10: This post originally misspelled Michèle Flournoy’s last name.