TOPICS
TOPICS
Obama announces transition team
President-elect Barack Obama announced his transition team on Wednesday, one day after winning the 2008 election.
The advisers, who have been working informally on the transition for months, will be formally known as the Obama-Biden Transition Project, a 501(c)(4) organization, a nonprofit that can engage in lobbying or political campaigning.
"Among the many projects undertaken by the transition board have been detailed analyses of previous transition efforts, policy statements made during the campaign, and the workings of federal government agencies, and priority positions that must be filled by the incoming administration," the announcement stated.
Three co-chairs -- John Podesta, president and CEO of the Center for American Progress; Valerie Jarrett, a senior Obama campaign adviser; and Pete Rouse, Obama's campaign chief of staff -- will oversee an advisory board and transition team staff.
Paul Light, a professor at New York University's Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service, said the quick announcement of the transition team was a sign the Obama camp was shifting smoothly from campaign mode to transition mode.
"Moving political people quickly into positions of significant influence is a good sign they're integrating rather than infighting," Light said. "That the day-to-day activity people were all people involved with the campaign is a good sign for a smooth transition."
Podesta, Jarrett and Rouse will lead an advisory board of individuals from both the private and public sectors: former EPA Administrator Carol Browner, Clinton Commerce Secretary William Daley, Christopher Edley, Michael Froman, Julius Genachowski, Donald Gips, Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano, Federico Peña, Susan Rice, Sonal Shah, Mark Gitenstein, and Ted Kaufman. Gitenstein and Kaufman will serve as co-chairs of Vice President-elect Joe Biden's transition team.
John Kamensky, senior fellow at the IBM Center for The Business of Government, said he did not know the advisers, but was "pleased" and "relieved" that the announcement was made so quickly after Election Day.
"They've thought this through and are not having any internal dissension about getting this started," Kamensky said.
And John Palguta, vice president for policy at the nonprofit Partnership for Public Service, said he thought the structure and composition of the team were promising.
"Having three co-chairs, it's looking like this is a divide-and-conquer effort," he said. "Speed and quality are so important."
Colleen M. Kelley, president of the National Treasury Employees Union, also praised the group. "Many of the team members have significant government experience which will serve President-elect Obama well," she said.
Senior staff on the transition team are:
- Chris Lu - Executive Director
- Dan Pfeiffer - Communications Director
- Stephanie Cutter - Chief Spokesperson
- Cassandra Butts - General Counsel
- Jim Messina - Personnel Director
- Patrick Gaspard - Associate Personnel Director
- Christine Varney - Personnel Counsel
- Melody Barnes - Co-Director of Agency Review
- Lisa Brown - Co-Director of Agency Review
- Phil Schiliro - Director of Congressional Relations
- Michael Strautmanis - Director of Public Liaison and Intergovernmental Affairs
- Katy Kale - Director of Operations
- Brad Kiley - Director of Operations
COMMENTS
- It's Nov 18th, and I am very disappointed by some of what I'm reading here. Geez, some of you need to get over it. He won! Move on. At least adopt a wait and see attitude while giving your full support. That's the challenge to you, can you be supportive? Our country deserves nothing less. Optimist Posted November 18, 2008 9:18 AM
- Worst president in the last 50 years? I would have to vote for Carter, and then Clinton. Bush walked into an ambush called 9/11, which not only cost thousands of lives, but devastated our economy (rescue and recovery costs, increased security costs, loss of business, the need to go to war against the terrorists, and the resulting enormous expense, etc.). While I don't agree with many of his decisions (e.g., DHS), there hasn't been a terrorist attack by Al Queda in the U.S. since then, which counts for a lot, as far as I'm concerned. Hmmm Posted November 17, 2008 7:54 PM
- He'll only do one term because the people will see he's already broke promises. He already lowered his tax threshold from 250K to 200K, by Feb. 09, it will be "anyone making over 50K will have their taxes raised." That's the total household folks, not individually. This empty suit will never do better then Bush. Bush handled what Clinton did not and could not handle. Clinton was the WORST President in the past 50 yrs. - DO YOUR HOMEWORK before making your comments!! You want Change, you're gonna' get it.. be prepared. mkh Posted November 12, 2008 12:33 PM









